[General] Incriminate

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yslamac

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The girl incriminated her younger brother by saying he had eaten the pizza.

Are there any words or expressions which are the same as "incriminate", but with a less serious connotation?

Thank you.
 
She dropped her brother in it.
She dobbed him in.

Those two might be specific to BrE.
 
NOT A TEACHER
How about:
The girl blamed her younger brother for having eaten the pizza.
The girl accused her younger brother of having eaten the pizza.

Are they acceptable?
 
I am not a teacher.

She grassed him up.
 
She ratted him out.
She squealed on him.
She told on him.
 
"Tattled on" would work, as would "gave up". Most of the expressions offered by my BrE colleagues are completely foreign to me.
 
There's a good Scots word for it, which is both a verb and a noun: "clipe"
To "clipe" on someone is to "tell on" them, or incriminate them - normally to a teacher in a school context. Anyone who does that is then labelled a "Clipe" - and must bear the resulting disapprobation of their schoolfellows. I believe it is derived from the old English word "clepe": to call or name. You see it used in Chaucer's works, where various characters are "ycleped" by their names.

Come to that, I suppose "tell on" (see above) is also a synonym for "incriminate".
 
NOT A TEACHER
How about:
The girl blamed her younger brother for having eaten the pizza.
The girl accused her younger brother of having eaten the pizza.

Are they acceptable?

Yes, they are.
 
'She informed on her brother about his eating the pizza.'

Not a teacher.
 
'inform
intransitive verb
2. to give information laying blame or accusation upon another'── quoted from the Webster's New World College Dictionary.
Does this definition apply to the OP's sentence?
NOT A TEACHER
As for American English, http://www.learnersdictionary.com/definition/inform

inform on/against (someone)

: to give information about the secret or criminal activity of (someone) to the police
  • Despite pressure from the police he refused to inform on the other conspirators.
But I suppose, "The girl informed her mother that her younger brother had eaten the pizza," will suffice.
Am I wrong?
 
Such a "clinical" statement (The girl informed her mother...) doesn't have that sense of "ratted him out."
 
"The girl informed her mother that her younger brother had eaten the pizza,"
If 'stealthily' was added at the end, would there be a sense of disapproval?
Not a teacher.
 
No — that would mean he had eaten the pizza stealthily.
 
If you meant "She informed her mother stealthily", that wouldn't work either. We generally move stealthily, we don't speak stealthily.
 
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