The word double for "crime" is "offense."
The opposite of "crime" is "justice" or "lawfulness."
The Esperanto words for crime and punishment are krimo and puno.
A person charged with a crime is the accused or the defendant.
The antonym for the word "crime" is "virtue", which means behavior showing high moral standards.
The word is a modern coinage combining Latin (crime) and Greek (-logy). The Latin part means of course crime. The Greek part means study or science of something (biology, geology, etc). Therefore crime+study = the study of crime
The word "double" in the context of crime is often referred to as "double jeopardy." This legal principle prevents an individual from being tried twice for the same offense after an acquittal or conviction. It protects individuals from the emotional and financial toll of repeated prosecutions for the same crime.
Double jeopardy means you can't be tried twice for the same crime.
Double jeapordy.
It's not one word but two. "Double jeopardy" means you can't be tried for the same crime twice.
The word crime has one syllable.
The cast of Double Crime - 2011 includes: Julia Rees as Megan
The opposite of "crime" is "justice" or "lawfulness."
There is no such word. Findings such as, "not guilty,' and 'pardon' do NOT absolve someone from a crime.
The Greek word for "Crime" is "έγκλημα".
The Esperanto words for crime and punishment are krimo and puno.
A person charged with a crime is the accused or the defendant.
No, under double jeopardy laws, a person cannot be charged for the same crime twice.