arson, n. The crime of deliberately starting a fire with intent to cause damage.
The dictionary confirms my understanding that "unintentional arson" is a contradiction in terms. We must therefore find the defendant not guilty.
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arson, n. The crime of deliberately starting a fire with intent to cause damage.
The dictionary confirms my understanding that "unintentional arson" is a contradiction in terms. We must therefore find the defendant not guilty.
Obviously just bad translations into your language.
Also, Greece is not bound to your understanding of anything :)
Headline's in English, story's in English, the phrase is an oxymoron in English.
But is it an unintentional oxymoron?
admitted she had thrown a cigarette that had ignited one of [the five] fronts
So, why is this in the news at all?
In the good old times people were used to stub them out thoroughly.
So, why is this in the news at all?
Because she allegedly didn't stub it out thoroughly.