A1 noun #2,894 más común 2 min de lectura

guilty

Feeling responsible for doing something wrong or being found to have broken the law.

Explanation at your level:

When you do something wrong, you feel guilty. It is a sad feeling. You might feel guilty if you break a friend's toy. It means you are sorry.

Being guilty means you did something bad. In court, a judge says 'guilty' if you broke the law. In daily life, you feel guilty when you make a mistake.

The word guilty is used to describe a person who has committed a crime or someone who feels bad about their actions. It is common to say 'I feel guilty about...' when you regret a past behavior.

Beyond the basic meaning, guilty often appears in phrases like 'guilty pleasure' or 'guilty conscience'. It implies a level of moral responsibility or accountability for one's actions, whether in a social or legal context.

In advanced usage, guilty can be used to describe an atmosphere, such as a 'guilty silence' where people feel uncomfortable because of a shared secret. It carries nuances of moral weight and social judgment that go beyond simple rule-breaking.

Historically and linguistically, guilty reflects the intersection of ethics and jurisprudence. It serves as a marker of the 'debt' one owes to society. In literature, it is often used to explore the psychological complexity of characters burdened by their past deeds.

Palabra en 30 segundos

  • Adjective describing wrongdoing.
  • Used in legal and personal contexts.
  • Noun form is guilt.
  • Commonly paired with 'feel' or 'found'.

When you hear the word guilty, think of two main sides. First, there is the internal emotional side: that heavy, sinking feeling in your stomach when you know you've done something wrong. It is the weight of conscience.

Second, there is the legal side. This is when a court of law decides that a person is responsible for a crime. It is a serious term that carries significant weight in both our personal lives and our justice systems.

The word guilty comes from the Old English word gylt, which meant a crime, sin, or debt. Interestingly, in early Germanic languages, the concept of guilt was tied directly to the idea of owing something.

If you committed a gylt, you owed a payment or a punishment to make things right. Over centuries, the word evolved from strictly talking about financial or social debts to describing the psychological state of shame we associate with it today.

You will often hear people say they feel guilty about something. This is a very common way to express personal regret. For example, 'I feel guilty about eating the last cookie.'

In a legal setting, you say someone is found guilty or pleads guilty. These are formal collocations used by lawyers and journalists to describe the status of a defendant in court.

1. Guilty pleasure: Something you enjoy but feel slightly embarrassed about, like a trashy reality show. 2. A guilty conscience: When your mind won't let you forget a mistake. 3. Look guilty: To have an expression that suggests you are hiding something. 4. Guilty as charged: A phrase used to admit you are indeed wrong. 5. Presumed innocent until proven guilty: The cornerstone of many justice systems.

Guilty is an adjective, so it describes nouns. It is pronounced /ˈɡɪl.ti/ in both British and American English, with the stress on the first syllable. It rhymes with 'filthy' or 'built-y'.

Note that it is not a verb, so you cannot 'guilty' someone. You must use a verb phrase like 'to make someone feel guilty' or 'to find someone guilty'.

Fun Fact

The 'u' in guilty is a vestige of older spellings where the 'u' was pronounced, but it became silent over time.

Pronunciation Guide

UK /ˈɡɪl.ti/

Short 'i' sound, hard 'g'.

US /ˈɡɪl.ti/

Similar to UK, clear 't'.

Common Errors

  • Pronouncing the 'u' (it is silent)
  • Hard 'g' as 'j'
  • Adding an extra syllable

Rhymes With

filthy built-y milky silky dilly

Difficulty Rating

Lectura 2/5

Easy to read

Writing 2/5

Easy to use

Speaking 2/5

Clear pronunciation

Escucha 2/5

Clear

What to Learn Next

Prerequisites

wrong bad law

Learn Next

innocent verdict remorse

Avanzado

culpability exonerate

Grammar to Know

Adjective usage

He is guilty.

Examples by Level

1

I feel guilty.

feeling bad

adjective

2

1

3

2

4

3

5

4

6

5

7

6

8

7

1

He is guilty.

2

I feel guilty for being late.

3

The jury said he was guilty.

4

Don't feel guilty.

5

She looked guilty.

6

It was a guilty look.

7

He pleaded guilty.

8

Are you guilty?

1

I have a guilty conscience.

2

It is a guilty pleasure of mine.

3

He was found guilty of theft.

4

She felt guilty about the lie.

5

They were guilty as charged.

6

Don't make me feel guilty.

7

The evidence proves he is guilty.

8

He admitted he was guilty.

1

The defendant was declared guilty by the jury.

2

I have a guilty pleasure for chocolate.

3

He suffered from a guilty conscience for years.

4

She felt a pang of guilty regret.

5

The guilty party must pay.

6

He looked guilty when asked about the money.

7

It is hard to prove someone guilty.

8

They were guilty of negligence.

1

The atmosphere in the room was thick with guilty silence.

2

He was guilty of a grave error in judgment.

3

She felt a guilty relief when the meeting was canceled.

4

The judge found him guilty on all counts.

5

His guilty expression gave him away immediately.

6

They were guilty of systemic corruption.

7

One cannot remain guilty of past mistakes forever.

8

The verdict was guilty.

1

The protagonist was haunted by a guilty conscience throughout the novel.

2

He was found guilty of high treason against the state.

3

The guilty pleasure of indulgence often leads to regret.

4

She was guilty of nothing more than being in the wrong place.

5

The jury's guilty verdict shocked the nation.

6

He bore the guilty weight of his family's secrets.

7

To be guilty is to be indebted to the moral order.

8

The evidence was sufficient to render a guilty verdict.

Sinónimos

ashamed responsible remorseful regretful blameworthy culpable

Antónimos

Colocaciones comunes

found guilty
plead guilty
guilty conscience
guilty pleasure
guilty as charged
feel guilty
look guilty
guilty party
guilty verdict
prove guilty

Idioms & Expressions

"guilty pleasure"

something you enjoy secretly

Watching cartoons is my guilty pleasure.

casual

""

""

""

""

""

Easily Confused

guilty vs guilt

Noun vs adjective

Guilt is the feeling; guilty is the state.

I feel guilt (n) / I feel guilty (adj).

Sentence Patterns

B1

Subject + be + guilty + of + noun

He is guilty of the crime.

Familia de palabras

Nouns

guilt The state of having done something wrong.

Verbs

guilt-trip To make someone feel guilty.

Adjectives

guilty Feeling or being responsible for a wrong.

Relacionado

innocence opposite

How to Use It

frequency

8

Formality Scale

Legal verdict (Formal) Guilty conscience (Neutral) Guilty pleasure (Casual)

Errores comunes

I guilty him. I made him feel guilty.
Guilty is an adjective, not a verb.
He is guilty of steal.
He is guilty of stealing.
Guilty is for noun/gerund.
A2
I feel guiltily.
I feel guilty.
Use adjective after feel.
B1

Tips

💡

Memory Palace

Imagine a courtroom in your mind.

💡

Native Usage

Use it to express regret.

🌍

Cultural Insight

Legal dramas use it constantly.

💡

Grammar Shortcut

Always follow with 'of' or 'about'.

💡

Say It Right

Silent 'u'.

💡

Don't Make This Mistake

Don't use as a verb.

💡

Did You Know?

It comes from the word 'debt'.

💡

Study Smart

Use flashcards with collocations.

Memorize It

Mnemonic

G-U-I-L-T-Y: Get Under It, Look To Yourself.

Visual Association

A person looking down with a heavy weight on their shoulders.

Word Web

crime shame court regret law

Desafío

Write a sentence using 'guilty pleasure'.

Origen de la palabra

Old English

Original meaning: Crime, sin, or debt.

Contexto cultural

Can be a very sensitive topic in legal or personal contexts.

Used frequently in court dramas and daily emotional expression.

'Guilty' by Barbra Streisand The film 'Guilty as Sin'

Practice in Real Life

Real-World Contexts

Legal

  • found guilty
  • plead guilty
  • guilty verdict

Conversation Starters

"What is your biggest guilty pleasure?"

"Do you think it's easy to tell when someone feels guilty?"

"Have you ever been falsely accused of something?"

Journal Prompts

Write about a time you felt guilty.

Describe a guilty pleasure you have.

Preguntas frecuentes

15 preguntas

No, it is an adjective.

Ponte a prueba

fill blank A1

I feel ___ because I broke the plate.

¡Correcto! No del todo. Respuesta correcta: guilty

Guilty describes the bad feeling.

multiple choice A2

What does it mean to be guilty?

¡Correcto! No del todo. Respuesta correcta: You did something wrong

Guilty means responsible for a wrong.

true false B1

You can be found guilty in a court of law.

¡Correcto! No del todo. Respuesta correcta: Verdadero

This is a standard legal term.

match pairs B1

Word

Significado

All matched!

Matches the idiom.

sentence order B2

Toca las palabras de abajo para formar la oración
¡Correcto! No del todo. Respuesta correcta:

Subject + verb + adjective.

Puntuación: /5

Related Content

Frases relacionadas

Más palabras de Emotions

abanimfy

C1

A collective psychological state characterized by a profound loss of vitality, spirit, or motivation within a specific group or community. It describes the stagnation that occurs when a social structure or organization loses its shared sense of purpose and creative energy.

abanimize

C1

Se refiere al proceso de eliminar la intensidad emocional para lograr una objetividad desapegada.

abhor

C1

Sentir un odio profundo o rechazo moral hacia algo. Es una palabra formal para expresar una repulsión intensa.

abminity

C1

To regard something with intense loathing or extreme disgust; to treat an object or idea as an abomination. It is used in high-level contexts to describe a profound moral or aesthetic aversion toward an action or concept.

abmotine

C1

Describes a state of being emotionally detached or lacking intrinsic motivation, often characterized by a cold, clinical, or indifferent stance. It is used to denote a specific lack of movement or response to external emotional stimuli.

abominable

C1

Causing a feeling of hatred or disgust; very unpleasant or disagreeable. It often describes something morally repulsive or extremely bad in quality.

abphilous

C1

To consciously withdraw or distance oneself from a previous affinity, attraction, or emotional attachment. It involves a systematic effort to break a psychological bond in order to achieve a state of neutrality or objectivity.

absedhood

C1

La 'absedhood' es un estado de profundo desapego o retraimiento emocional. Se refiere a un aislamiento intenso, a menudo autoimpuesto.

abvidness

C1

The quality or state of being intensely eager, enthusiastic, or consumed by a particular interest or desire. It represents a level of dedication and spirited engagement that often goes beyond standard enthusiasm, typical of scholars, collectors, or hobbyists.

adacrty

C1

Alacrity refers to a cheerful readiness, promptness, or willingness to do something. It describes not only the speed of an action but also the positive and enthusiastic attitude of the person performing it.

¿Te ha servido?
¡No hay comentarios todavía. Sé el primero en compartir tus ideas!