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  1. Dictionary
    guilt
    /ɡɪlt/

    noun

    verb

    • 1. make (someone) feel guilty, especially in order to induce them to do something: informal "Celeste had been guilted into going by her parents"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. the fact or state of having done something wrong or committed a crime: In the US, people accused of a crime are presumed to be innocent until their guilt is proven. Guilt is also a feeling of anxiety or unhappiness that you have done something immoral or wrong, such as causing harm to another person:

  3. The meaning of GUILT is the fact of having committed a breach of conduct especially violating law and involving a penalty; broadly : guilty conduct. How to use guilt in a sentence.

  4. the fact or state of having done something wrong or committed a crime: In the US, people accused of a crime are presumed to be innocent until their guilt is proven. Guilt is also a feeling of anxiety or unhappiness that you have done something immoral or wrong, such as causing harm to another person:

  5. You experience guilt when you feel bad about doing something wrong or committing some offense. Guilt is also the state of having committed the offense — it's the opposite of "innocence." The noun guilt stems from the Old English word gylt, meaning "crime, sin, fault, or fine."

  6. Guilt is an unhappy feeling that you have because you have done something wrong or think that you have done something wrong. Her emotions had ranged from anger to guilt in the space of a few seconds. Some cancer patients experience strong feelings of guilt. Synonyms: shame, regret, remorse, contrition More Synonyms of guilt. 2. uncountable noun.

  7. Guilt definition: the fact or state of having committed an offense, crime, violation, or wrong, especially against moral or penal law; culpability. See examples of GUILT used in a sentence.

  8. 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]