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Guilt   /gɪlt/   Listen
Guilt

noun
1.
The state of having committed an offense.  Synonym: guiltiness.  Antonym: innocence.
2.
Remorse caused by feeling responsible for some offense.  Synonyms: guilt feelings, guilt trip, guilty conscience.



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"Guilt" Quotes from Famous Books



... injustice has grown, and thieving. Not only criminals, but men who are absolutely innocent are arrested and forced to pay fines for no reason whatsoever: to be known to have wealth is more dangerous than guilt, so that the rich do not care to have any dealings with the powerful, and dare not even risk appearing at the muster of the royal troops. [7] Therefore, when any man makes war on Persia, whoever he may be, he can roam up and down the country to his heart's content without striking ...
— Cyropaedia - The Education Of Cyrus • Xenophon

... perjurer. But the last story of all is the most instructive. William's formal, and more than formal, religion abhorred a false oath, in himself or in another man. But, so long as he keeps himself personally clear from the guilt, he does not scruple to put another man under special temptation, and, while believing in the power of the holy relics, he does not scruple to abuse them to a purpose of fraud. Surely, if Harold did break his oath, the wrath of the saints would ...
— William the Conqueror • E. A. Freeman

... the whole power resided, were so connected by hereditary alliances, or so divided by inveterate enmities, that it was impossible, without employing an armed force, either to punish the most flagrant guilt, or to give security to the most entire innocence. Rapine and violence, when employed against a hostile tribe, instead of making a person odious among his own clan, rather recommended him to their esteem and approbation; and, by ...
— Rambles and Recollections of an Indian Official • William Sleeman

... coming, and even felt a little sorry for Harold, of whom she was beginning to think more kindly. So she wrote a few carefully worded lines, in which she tried to prepare him as much as possible for the only answer she could give, but before her letter was sent Dolly had told her story of innocent guilt. ...
— The Giant's Robe • F. Anstey

... and their knavish parasites. The Intendant was banished from France for life, and all his property confiscated; Cadet was banished for nine years and fined six million livres; the others received sentences in keeping with the measure of their guilt. ...
— Old Quebec - The Fortress of New France • Sir Gilbert Parker and Claude Glennon Bryan


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