bring to account Antonyms

Meaning of bring to account

bring to account

to procure in exchange, to give birth to, to convey, lead, carry, or cause to come along with one toward the place from which the action is being regarded, force, compel, to make unmistakably clear, to cause to exist or occur, to cause to be, act, or move in a special way, to be the occasion of, yield, produce, to sell for, to cause to arrive or exist, to result in, escort, accompany, to use with effect, to carry (a total) forward, to compel to agree, assent, or submit, adduce, to begin or commence (a legal proceeding) through proper legal procedure, to put (as a lawsuit) before a court, to formally assert (as a charge or indictment), prefer, persuade, induce, to cause to come with oneself by carrying or leading especially to the place from which the action is viewed, institute, attract, to produce to view, to bring to book, recall, to cause to reach a certain state or take a certain action, bear, to cause to come into a particular state or condition, to bear as an attribute or characteristic, disclose, reveal, to compel to give an account, to come last or behind, reprimand

bring to account Sentence Examples

  1. The auditors meticulously examined the financial records to bring the embezzling employees to account.
  2. The prosecutor vowed to bring the perpetrator to account for the heinous crime he had committed.
  3. The government enacted regulations to bring corporations to account for their environmental impact.
  4. The citizens demanded that corrupt officials be held accountable and brought to account.
  5. The investigation aimed to bring the employer to account for his unfair labor practices.
  6. The public outcry brought the mayor to account for his mishandling of the crisis.
  7. The independent committee was formed to bring the university to account for its abuses of power.
  8. The shareholders voted to bring the CEO to account for his reckless financial decisions.
  9. The non-profit organization vowed to bring the pharmaceutical company to account for its deceptive marketing practices.
  10. The whistleblower courageously brought the truth to light, hoping to bring the wrongdoers to account.

FAQs About the word bring to account

to procure in exchange, to give birth to, to convey, lead, carry, or cause to come along with one toward the place from which the action is being regarded, forc

denounce,censure, condemn, call to account, punish, reprimand, cut up, scold, rebuke, objurgate

honor, endorse, commend, hail,cite,praise, indorse, acclaim, approve, sanction

The auditors meticulously examined the financial records to bring the embezzling employees to account.

The prosecutor vowed to bring the perpetrator to account for the heinous crime he had committed.

The government enacted regulations to bring corporations to account for their environmental impact.

The citizens demanded that corrupt officials be held accountable and brought to account.