It depends on the meaning.
If who refers to them, the sentence is He is one of them who are guilty.
If who refers to he, then the sentence is He is one of them who is guilty.
That is the correct spelling of "acquittal" (a finding of not guilty).
The opposite of guilty is innocentInnocent
The word sought may be one of these:continent - large landmassconcurrent - occurring at the same timeconsonant - the letters that are not vowelsconcatenate - (verb) to link units, parts, or forms
The correct spelling is innocent. The jury found him innocent of all charges. Many innocent persons are also charged, found guilty, and jailed.
"It is one of the biggest cities" is correct.
Yes, if the defendant says and shows he/she is guilty.
The correct spelling is "guilty." It is spelled with a "u" after the "g" followed by "i-l-t-y."
No, the usual way to say it is "guilty of arson."
Yes, the correct spelling is "accused" (alleged to be guilty).
Co-defendants can be sentenced differently. They do not have to all be found guilty or not guilty.
The correct spelling is "innocent" (naive, or not guilty).
That is the correct spelling of "acquittal" (a finding of not guilty).
The correct spelling of the adjective is innocent (naive, or not guilty).
No , Slade is the one who is guilty...
One way to use "guilty" in a sentence is: "He felt guilty for forgetting his friend's birthday."
The OJ Simpson pog that says on one side not guilty and on the other side guilty is more than $50000. Where can we sell it ?
The Guilty One - 1916 was released on: USA: 6 October 1916