i think the verdict was a judge from the early 1500's. they told him to shut up and then told him he was considered guilty..... The End
The opposite of guilty is innocentInnocent
The word "conviction" has two meanings. The first is an absolute belief in someone of something even though there may be no hard evidence. eg. "I have the conviction that God exists even though I have never seen or heard Him".The other meaning of this word is legalistic. After a trial in a court of law and after a jury's verdict of guilty, a felon is convicted and his sentence is handed by the judge. An example of "conviction" in this sense is, "The man was being tried for murder and the weight of evidence against him was so strong that his conviction was no surprise to anyone."
You can feel 'guilty about' doing something, but you are 'guilty of' a crime (or of any other action which might be deemed wrong in some way).
The noun form for the adjective 'guilty' is guiltiness.The word 'guilty' is the adjective form of the noun guilt.
Factual guilt is when someone is guilty of an act, but not found guilty in court.Technical (procedural) guilt is when someone is guilt of an act and found guilty in court.
That IS the verdict: NOT GUILTY.
That IS the verdict, NOT GUILTY
The verdict.
The pupose of the "guilty but mentally ill" verdict is to
The word you're looking for is "verdict". A verdict is the formal decision made by a jury or judge on the guilt or innocence of a defendant in a trial.
The cast of Verdict Not Guilty - 1933 includes: Eloyce Gist
Verdict Guilty or Not - 2011 was released on: USA: 6 June 2011 (limited)
A jury verdict of 'guilty' signifies that it is probably a criminal trial. A judge cannot overturn a jury verdict in a criminal trial.
What part of NOT guilty are you asking about?
sentence
convicted, or conviction - a conviction is the verdict that results when a court of law finds a defendant guilty of a crime.
The sentence, as pronounced by the judge.