Criminal vs Culprit vs Offender vs Perpetrator

When to use each in English, with meaning, register, and examples.

Criminal

Top 1,000 (very common)A2noun

Culprit

Top 3,000 (common)B1noun

Offender

Top 3,000 (common)B2noun

Perpetrator

Top 5,000 (fairly common)
Most common: Criminal
 CriminalCulpritOffenderPerpetrator
Pronunciation🇬🇧 /["/ˈkrɪmɪnl/"]/🇺🇸 /["/ˈkrɪmɪnl/"]/🇬🇧 //ˈkʌlprɪt//🇺🇸 //ˈkʌlprɪt//🇬🇧 /["/əˈfendə(r)/"]/🇺🇸 /["/əˈfendər/"]/🇬🇧 //ˈpɜː.pə.treɪ.tə//🇺🇸 //ˈpɜr.pə.trɪˌteɪ.tər//
MeaningA person who breaks the law.The person who is responsible for a crime or problem.A person who does something wrong or breaks the law.A person who commits a crime or harmful act.
ExampleHe was found guilty and became a criminal after his trial.The detectives finally caught the culprit after months of investigation.a **persistent/serious/violent, etc. offender**The police arrested the **perpetrator** after the robbery.
RegisterNeutralNeutralNeutralNeutral
How commonTop 1,000 (very common)Top 3,000 (common)Top 3,000 (common)Top 5,000 (fairly common)
CEFR levelA2B1B2-
Part of speechnounnounnoun
Collocationsdangerous, violent, real, catch, convict, prosecuteidentify the culprit, catch the culprit, find the culpritalleged, convicted, first, sentence, main, worstidentified perpetrator, suspected perpetrator, perpetrator arrested, violent perpetrator, perpetrator of a crime
Antonymslaw-abiding citizen, innocenthero, innocentvictim, law-abiding citizen-
Common mistakes'Criminal' used as an adjective without a noun (e.g., saying 'he is a criminal' without context), Confusing 'criminal' with 'criminalized' (which means made illegal), Using 'criminal' to describe someone who has made a mistake (which can be too strong)Using 'culprit' with non-criminal issues (e.g., 'the culprit of the issue' instead of 'the cause')., Confusing 'culprit' with 'victim' in discussions about crime.Confused with 'defender', mistakenly referring to someone who helps., Using 'offender' for non-criminal violations, like minor rule-breaking., Assuming all offenders are violent; people can offend in various ways.Confused with 'victim' - a perpetrator commits an act, while a victim suffers from it., Using it to describe an innocent person., Mispronouncing it due to the complex spelling.
Usage notesUse 'criminal' in legal contexts or discussions about crime. Avoid using it casually to label someone without evidence of wrongdoing.Use in legal or informal discussions about responsibility. Avoid in very formal contexts.Commonly used in legal contexts. More appropriate in formal discussions or written reports about crime than in casual conversation.Used in legal contexts and discussions about crime. Avoid informal situations.

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Criminal

Frequently asked questions: Criminal vs Culprit vs Offender vs Perpetrator

What's the difference between Criminal, Culprit, Offender, and Perpetrator?

Criminal: A person who breaks the law. Culprit: The person who is responsible for a crime or problem. Offender: A person who does something wrong or breaks the law. Perpetrator: A person who commits a crime or harmful act.

Which is more common: Criminal, Culprit, Offender, and Perpetrator?

Criminal is the most common in everyday English.

Which is more advanced: Criminal, Culprit, Offender, and Perpetrator?

Offender is the highest level, at B2, on the CEFR scale.

Can you show an example of each?

Criminal: He was found guilty and became a criminal after his trial. Culprit: The detectives finally caught the culprit after months of investigation. Offender: a **persistent/serious/violent, etc. offender** Perpetrator: The police arrested the **perpetrator** after the robbery.

Can I use Criminal, Culprit, Offender, and Perpetrator interchangeably?

Not always. Criminal, Culprit, Offender, and Perpetrator are related and overlap in some contexts, but they differ in register, how common they are, and usage, so swapping one for another can change the meaning or tone. Check the differences above before substituting.

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