Want this question answered?
Mea culpa.
Mea culpa.
Mea culpa
To sickening degree in Latin
Take me - I'm yours - 'mea culpa' is Latin for 'my fault'
mea culpa?
Mea culpa ("my fault").
The English equivalent of the Latin phrase 'mea culpa' is 'my blame' or 'my fault'. The opposite is a lack of blame, or fault, which is innocence. And the corresponding antonym in Latin therefore is mea innocentia, which means 'my innocence'.
"Mea culpa" is a Latin phrase that translates to "my fault" or "my mistake." It is an admission of guilt or an acknowledgment of one's responsibility for a wrongdoing.
It is from the Latin and literally means "Blame (culpa) is mine (mea)"
katana storm mea culpa
Fault. Mea culpa--my fault. Culprit--the person at fault.