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impeachable
[im-pee-chuh-buhl]
Other 51Թ Forms
- impeachability noun
- nonimpeachability noun
- nonimpeachable adjective
51Թ History and Origins
Origin of impeachable1
Example Sentences
“I drafted these articles of impeachment because it’s clear that President Trump has committed impeachable crimes,” Thanedar told Salon.
Bribery typically requires just such a quid pro quo, and it is deemed an impeachable offense in a separate part of the Constitution.
In his post, Gill that by issuing a temporary restraining order against the administration over its use of the 1798 wartime law called the Alien Enemies Act, Boasberg had committed an impeachable offense.
“In this year’s race, a non-choice ignores Trump’s singular unfitness for office,” Greene wrote, “demonstrated time and again through his dishonesty, his false claims to have won the 2020 election, his criminal convictions, his impeachable offenses, his race-baiting, his threats of retaliation against his opponents, and many other features that make him a danger to the nation.”
“It is not necessary for the House of Representatives to show that the dealings involved a quid pro quo to rise to the level of an impeachable offense,” the report reads.
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When To Use
Impeachable is used to describe an offense that could get a public official impeached—formally accused of misconduct.The act or process of or the state of being impeached in this way is called impeachment. In the U.S., impeach and its related words are closely associated with the act of officially bringing charges of misconduct against a sitting president (though other federal officials can be impeached). Describing an offense as impeachable means it could result in impeachment.The U.S. Constitution cites treason and bribery as impeachable offenses, along with other “high crimes and misdemeanors.”Impeachable can also be used in this context to describe a person who could be impeached. For example, presidents and some other federal officials are impeachable according to the law. Sometimes, the word is used to indicate that a person did something that could get them impeached, as in These offenses absolutely make the president impeachable. In a more general legal context, to impeach a witness means to question their credibility. The word impeach can also be used in a more general way meaning to call into question or challenge. Impeachable can be used in this sense, but the opposite, unimpeachable, is much more common. It’s used to describe things that cannot be questioned or are impossible to discredit because there is absolutely nothing wrong with them, as in His record is unimpeachable, so his opponents have resorted to inventing scandals. Example: There is no doubt that accepting a bribe from a foreign official is an impeachable offense.
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