innocence

innocence — noun

1. the legal condition of someone who has not committed the criminal act they were

1.名詞B2
釋義

the legal condition of someone who has not committed the criminal act they were charged with

例句

The forensic evidence proved the defendant's innocence beyond any reasonable doubt.

collocation: prove + [someone's] innocence

Nicholas has always maintained his innocence and refused to accept a plea deal.

collocation: maintain + innocence

同義詞
  • guiltlessness

    more formal and less common; used chiefly in legal writing

  • blamelessness

    focuses on moral fault rather than legal guilt; broader in scope

反義詞
  • guilt

    the direct opposite — the fact of having committed the crime

  • culpability

    formal term for legal responsibility for wrongdoing

用法筆記

Uncountable — never used as 'an innocence' or 'innocences'. Frequently paired with verbs like 'prove', 'maintain', 'establish', and 'protest'.

常見錯誤

The lawyer proved his innocent.
The lawyer proved his innocence.
💡'innocent' is an adjective; 'innocence' is the noun form.
He claimed his innocents.
He claimed his innocence.
💡'innocence' has no plural form.

2. the quality of having little experience of life, especially of its unpleasant or

2.名詞B2
釋義

the quality of having little experience of life, especially of its unpleasant or cruel aspects, so that one tends to trust others too easily

例句

Renata gazed at the crowded night market with the innocence of a small child.

collocation: innocence of a [child]

Sofie's innocence led her to trust a man who was clearly lying to her.

同義詞
  • naivety

    very similar in meaning, but can carry a slightly more negative judgement of foolishness

  • guilelessness

    emphasises honesty and lack of deceit rather than inexperience

  • purity

    more about moral or spiritual cleanness; broader than 'innocence'

反義詞
  • worldliness

    having a lot of experience of life, often in a shrewd or sophisticated way

  • cynicism

    the belief that people are motivated purely by self-interest — opposite of the trusting quality of innocence

  • experience

    neutral opposite; having knowledge of life's realities

用法筆記

Uncountable — does not take a plural form. Often modified by nouns like 'childhood' or 'youth' (e.g. 'childhood innocence'). The phrase 'lose one's innocence' is a common fixed expression meaning to discover the unpleasant truths of adult life.

常見錯誤

She has a innocence about her.
She has an innocence about her.
💡'innocence' begins with a vowel sound, so the article must be 'an'.
Her innocences was charming.
Her innocence was charming.
💡do not add a plural -s.