Printer Friendly
Dictionary, Encyclopedia and Thesaurus - The Free Dictionary
3,909,439,841 visitors served.
forum Join the Word of the Day Mailing List For webmasters
?
Dictionary/
thesaurus
Medical
dictionary
Legal
dictionary
Financial
dictionary
Acronyms
 
Idioms
Encyclopedia
Wikipedia
encyclopedia
?

guilt
(redirected from Guilty (song))

   Also found in: Medical, Legal, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia 0.01 sec.
guilt  (glt)
n.
1.
a. The fact of being responsible for the commission of an offense. See Synonyms at blame.
b. Law The fact of having been found to have violated a criminal law; legal culpability.
c. Responsibility for a mistake or error.
2.
a. Remorseful awareness of having done something wrong.
b. Self-reproach for supposed inadequacy or wrongdoing.
tr.v. guilt·ed, guilt·ing, guilts
To make or try to make (someone) feel guilty.

[Middle English gilt, from Old English gylt, crime.]

guilt [gɪlt]
n
1. the fact or state of having done wrong or committed an offence
2. (Law) responsibility for a criminal or moral offence deserving punishment or a penalty
3. remorse or self-reproach caused by feeling that one is responsible for a wrong or offence
4. Archaic sin or crime
[Old English gylt, of obscure origin]

Guilt 

See Also: CONSCIENCE

  1. Branded with his guilt as if he were tattooed —Henry Slesar
  2. Berating himself, like an orator grading his own speech —William Diehl
  3. Gather guilt like a young intern his symptoms, his certain evidence —Anne Sexton
  4. Guilt is like mothers. Everyone in the world has at least one. And it’s passed down like a torch to the next generation —Erma Bombeck This has been changed to the present tense from the original, which read: “I figured out long ago that guilt was like mothers. Everyone in the world had at least one. And it was passed down like a torch to the next generation.”
  5. Guilt, thick as ether, seeped into my body —Jonathan Valin
  6. Guilt will descend on you like London fog —Walter Allen
  7. The heat of shame mounted through her legs and body and sounded in her ears like the sound of sand pouring —Nadine Gordimer
  8. Looked as guilty as if he’d kicked his grandmother —Raymond Chandler
  9. Looking behind me … as guilty as a murderer whose knife drips blood —Ann Beattie
  10. Looks like a hound caught slipping a chop from the table —T. Coraghessan Boyle
  11. A sense of guilt like a scent —Louis MacNeice
  12. Shame crowding his throat like vomit —Jean Thompson
  13. The thought of the wrong she had done … aroused in her a feeling akin to revulsion such as a drowning man might feel who had shaken off another man who clung to him in the water —Leo Tolstoy
  14. We are all like mice: one eats the cheese and all are blamed —Solomon Ibn Vega

Guilt 

caught with one’s hand in the cookie jar Taken by surprise in the process of wrongdoing; caught red-handed. This expression implies that the person caught is not only surprised, but is also in possession of self-incriminating material. Though the image is that of a mischievous child atop a counter engaged in normal childhood activities, in context the phrase is often used for serious adult wrongdoing, particularly political graft.

caught with one’s pants down See VULNERABILITY.

cry peccavi To confess one’s guilt; to openly acknowledge one’s fault or wrongdoing. The origin of this expression is the Latin peccavi I have sinned.’ Both peccavi ‘an acknowledgement of guilt’ and cry peccavi date from the 16th century.

Now lowly crouch’d, I cry peccavi, And prostrate, supplicate pour ma vie.
(Jonathan Swift, Sheridan’s Submission, 1730)

dead to rights See CERTAINTY.

red-handed In the act, with clear evidence of guilt, in flagrante delicto. This term evolved from the earlier with red hand and with bloody hand.

tarred with the same brush See SIMILARITY.

with bloody hand Guilty; caught red-handed or in flagrante delicto. According to the Forest Law of ancient Britain, a man found with bloody hand was presumed guilty of having killed the king’s deer.

with egg on one’s face See HUMILIATION.

ThesaurusLegend:  Synonyms Related Words Antonyms
Noun1.guilt - the state of having committed an offenseguilt - the state of having committed an offense
condition, status - a state at a particular time; "a condition (or state) of disrepair"; "the current status of the arms negotiations"
bloodguilt - the state of being guilty of bloodshed and murder
complicity - guilt as an accomplice in a crime or offense
criminalism, criminality, criminalness - the state of being a criminal
guilt by association - the attribution of guilt (without proof) to individuals because the people they associate with are guilty
impeachability, indictability - the state of being liable to impeachment
innocence - a state or condition of being innocent of a specific crime or offense; "the trial established his innocence"
2.guilt - remorse caused by feeling responsible for some offense
compunction, remorse, self-reproach - a feeling of deep regret (usually for some misdeed)
survivor guilt - a deep feeling of guilt often experienced by those who have survived some catastrophe that took the lives of many others; derives in part from a feeling that they did not do enough to save the others who perished and in part from feelings of being unworthy relative to those who died; "survivor guilt was first noted in those who survived the Holocaust"

guilt
noun
1. shame, regret, remorse, contrition, guilty conscience, bad conscience, self-reproach, self-condemnation, guiltiness Her emotions went from anger to guilt in the space of a few seconds.
shame honour, pride, self-respect
2. culpability, blame, responsibility, misconduct, delinquency, criminality, wickedness, iniquity, sinfulness, blameworthiness, guiltiness You were never convinced of his guilt, were you?
culpability virtue, innocence, righteousness, sinlessness, blamelessness
Quotations
"This is his first punishment, that by the verdict of his own heart no guilty man is acquitted" [Juvenal Satires]
"So full of artless jealousy is guilt"
"It spills itself in fearing to be spilt" [William Shakespeare Hamlet]
Translations
guilt [gɪlt]
A. N (gen) → culpa f, culpabilidad f (Jur) → culpabilidad f
feelings of guiltsentimientos mpl de culpa or de culpabilidad
to admit one's guiltconfesarse culpable
she was racked with guiltla atormentaba el remordimiento
B. CPD guilt complex Ncomplejo m de culpabilidad or de culpa
guilt trip N there's no point in having a guilt trip about itno merece la pena empezar con sentimientos de culpabilidad, no merece la pena sentirse culpable

guilt [ˈgɪlt] nculpabilité f
guilt complex ncomplexe m de culpabilité

guilt
nSchuld f (→ for, of an +dat); to feel guilt (about something)sich (wegen etw) schuldig fühlen, (wegen etw) Schuldgefühle haben; feelings of guiltSchuldgefühle pl; guilt complexSchuldkomplex m

guilt [gɪlt] n (being guilty) → colpevolezza; (feeling guilty) → colpa, senso di colpa
tormented by guilt → tormentato/a dal senso di colpa

guilt
n guilt [gilt]
1 a sense of shame a feeling of guilt. skuld إحساس بالذَّنْب вина vina skyld; skyldfølelse die Schuld ενοχή culpa, culpabilidad süü(tunne) گناه syyllisyydentunto culpabilité אַשמָה अपराध बोध osjećaj krivnje bűntudat rasa bersalah sekt colpa, colpevolezza 罪悪感 죄책감 kaltė vaina rasa bersalah schuld skyldfølelse wina culpa vinovăţie вина vina krivda krivica skuld guilt suçluluk (duygusu) 內疚 провина احساس جرم tội lỗi 内疚
2 the state of having done wrong Fingerprints proved the murderer's guilt. skuld جُرْم، ذَنْب закононарушение vina skyld die Schuld ένοχος culpa, culpabilidad süü جرم syyllisyys culpabilité אַשמָה अपराध krivnja bűnösség kesalahan sekt colpevolezza 有罪 범죄 행위 kaltė vaina bersalah schuld skyld wina culpa culpabilitate вина vina krivda krivica skuld ซึ่งมีความผิด suç, suçluluk 罪行 злочин قصوروار ہونے کا احساس sự hối hận
adj guilty
having, feeling, or causing guilt The jury found the prisoner guilty; a guilty conscience. skuldig مُذْنِب виновен vinný; špatný skyldig schuldig, schuldbewußt ένοχος culpable süüdi گناه کار syyllinen coupable, chargé אָשֶׁם अपराधी kriv bűnös bersalah sekur colpevole 有罪の 유죄의 kaltas vainīgs bersalah schuldig skyldig, skyldbevisst winny culpado vinovat виновный vinný; zlý kriv kriv skyldig, skuldmedveten ซึ่งสำนึกผิด suçlu 有罪的 винний, винуватий قصوروار đáng khiển trách
n guiltiness
skuldigheid غير مُذْنِب виновност provinilost skyld die Schuldigkeit ενοχή culpabilidad süüdiolek جرم؛ تقصیر syyllisyys culpabilité אַשמָה अपराधिकता krivnja bűnösség kesalahan sekt colpevolezza 有罪 유죄, 양심의 가책 kaltumas vainīgums rasa bersalah schuld skyldighet bycie winnym culpa culpabilitate виновность previnilosť krivda krivost skuldmedvetenhet ความรู้สึกผิด suçluluk 有罪 винність, провинність قصور sự có tội
adv guiltily
He looked at his mother guiltily. skuldig بشعور بالذَّنْب виновно provinile skyldigt schuldbewußt ένοχα con aire de culpabilidad süüdlaslikult از روی احساس گناه syyllisyydentuntoisesti d'un air coupable בִּתחוּשַת אַשמָה अपराधिकता s krivnjom bűnbánóan dengan rasa bersalah með sektarsvip con aria colpevole やましい様子で 유죄로 kaltai vainīgi dengan rasa bersalah met een schuldig gevoel skyldig, skyldbevisst z poczuciem winy com ar culpado cu un aer vinovat/de culpabilitate виновато previnilo z občutkom krivde s osećajem krivice skyldigt, skuldmedvetet อย่างละอาย suçlu gibi 內疚地 винувато مجرامانہ نظر سے với vẻ có lỗi 内疚地

guilt ذَنْب vina skyld Schuld ενοχή culpa syyllisyys culpabilité krivica colpa 有罪 유죄 schuldgevoel skyld wina culpa вина skuld ความผิด suçluluk tội 犯罪


Want to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit the webmaster's page for free fun content.
?Page tools
Printer friendly
Cite / link
Feedback
Add definition
Mentioned in?   Dictionary browser?   Full browser?
 
 
 
Dictionary, Thesaurus, and Translations
?

Terms of Use | Privacy policy | Feedback | Advertise with Us | Copyright © 2012 Farlex, Inc.
Disclaimer
All content on this website, including dictionary, thesaurus, literature, geography, and other reference data is for informational purposes only. This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.