at fault Meaning in Telugu ( at fault తెలుగు అంటే)
తప్పులో, తప్పు వద్ద
Adjective:
తప్పు వద్ద,
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at firstat first blush
at first glance
at first hand
at first sight
at full pelt
at full speed
at hand
at heart
at home
at large
at last
at least
at leisure
at length
at fault's Usage Examples:
Carriers soon realised that often they might themselves be at fault should cargo be lost or damaged at sea, and they sought to take out third-party indemnity insurance in respect of cargo liability.
great fault, it is Curzon"s lack of true psychological foresight and unimaginative nature that appears to define him given the inanity of the war.
When asked for advice to give to young goalkeepers, Swift replied that he drew diagrams of each goal scored against him to see if he was at fault.
Compared to the western understanding of right-of-way, which refers to the legal right to proceed forward in a vehicle without fear of being found at fault for causing a collision, right-of-way in China means, for all intents and purposes, that the person who is in the way (first) has the right unless road signs otherwise dictate.
the utmost service in destroying the exaggerated reputations of the mediocrities of his time, but his judgment was sometimes at fault.
was at fault, suspending his license for 30 days for negligence and unskillfulness.
In Biederman and Texas"s view, Fournier gave Diggler journalistic credulousness and centrist belief that both sides of any issue are at fault.
If Ann sued Charlotte's bar alone, Charlotte's bar would be liable for the full "10 million despite only being 10% at fault for the injury.
and its real name was Olba; but the critic is here himself at fault, confounding Olbia with the Pisidian Olbasa.
Though she was in no way at fault for what had happened, Komand'r was, for all time, inextricably linked with that terrible day.
He conceded that the NCB was at fault, an admission which would have rendered much of the inquiry unnecessary had it been made at the outset, notwithstanding the advice of Lord Edmund-Davies that his appearance was not necessary.
The apparently minor difference between the two modified forms of comparative negligence is thought by lawyers handling such cases to be significant, as juries who ordinarily assign degrees of fault are much less willing to award damages to a plaintiff who is equally at fault than to one who is less at fault than the defendant.
The phrase means, in essence, that if both parties are equally at fault or the plaintiff is at greater fault, the court will not involve itself in resolving one side's claim over the other, and whoever possesses whatever is in dispute may continue to do so in the absence of a superior claim.
Synonyms:
guilty,
Antonyms:
innocent, righteous,