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Guilt

[ɡɪlt] · gilt · English · noun
negativeintensity: highsadness

The feeling of deserving blame for a specific act or omission.

Definition

The feeling of deserving blame for a specific act or omission — “I did something bad.”

Connotation & usage

The act-focused counterpart to shame: it attaches to a specific deed or norm-violation and is tied to conscience and the impulse to repair — hence its more prosocial character (apology, amends). It needs no audience (an internal self-appraisal), unlike embarrassment (social) or humiliation (externally inflicted). Remorse and contrition are allied but narrower — remorse is the anguish over a particular wrong, contrition the penitent wish to amend.

Senses & usage

The feeling

The painful sense of deserving blame for one's offenses — self-reproach.

This emotional sense is recorded from the 1680s and was once disputed by purists.

Legal culpability

The fact of having committed an offense, especially a punishable one.

The older, objective sense — guilt as opposed to innocence (Old English gylt “offense”).

Related words

Etymology

Old English gylt “crime, sin, failure of duty,” of unknown ultimate origin. The -u- in the modern spelling is unetymological.

How it has changed

A shift from the objective/legal sense (“crime, offense”) toward the subjective emotional sense (“the feeling of being to blame”), first recorded in the 1680s. The verb “to guilt (someone)” is recent (later 20th century). No reliable further recent shift.

Sources

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From The Lexicon of Feeling — a carefully sourced dictionary & thesaurus of emotions across 60 languages. Definitions are verified against the cited sources; emotion-family, valence, and intensity tags are editorial. This is a learning tool for emotional vocabulary, not therapy or a substitute for professional care. © 2026 The Lexicon of Feeling.