Guilty.
Innocent or acquitted.
The word 'guilty' is an adjective, a word that describes a noun.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.The word 'guilty' is the adjective form of the noun guilt.The pronoun that takes the place of the noun guilt in a sentence is it.Examples:He finally admitted his guilt. He could not bear it on his conscience. (the pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun 'guilt' in the second sentence)He had a guilty conscience. (the adjective 'guilty' describes the noun 'conscience')
Guilty means that a person admits to committing the crime they were accused of. Not guilty means that a person denies committing the crime and the prosecution must prove their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt in court.
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.
Innocent or Not Guilty
The opposite of the word acquit would be convict. Acquit means to declare someone not guilty, while convict means to declare someone guilty, especially in a court of law.
"AHK-tooss RAY-ooss" is the pronunciation of "actus reus."Specifically, the Latin phrase means "guilty act." The masculine noun "actus" means "act." The masculine adjective "reus" means "guilty."
The verdict.
When one is relieved from the charges, it means he is declared not guilty.
Guilty.
The noun form for the adjective 'guilty' is guiltiness.The word 'guilty' is the adjective form of the noun guilt.
Innocent or acquitted.
The word 'guilt' is an abstract noun, a word for an emotion.
Shame or ashamed.
It means she wants to date other guys & not feel guilty about it.
Guilty is the legal term that is used to describe someone who has committed an illegal act. There is no other term used to describe this.