INNOCENT vs VINDICATED: NOUN
- A person, especially a child, who is free of evil or sin.
- A simple, guileless, inexperienced, or unsophisticated person.
- A very young child.
- Childermas day.
- An unsophisticated person; hence, a child; a simpleton; an idiot.
- An innocent person; one free from, or unacquainted with, guilt or sin.
- Same as innocence, 6.
- A person who lacks knowledge of evil
- Those who are innocent; young children.
- An artless or simple person; a natural; a simpleton; an idiot.
- An innocent person, especially a little child, as free from actual sin.
- N/A
INNOCENT vs VINDICATED: ADJECTIVE
- Lacking, deprived, or devoid of something.
- Unaware.
- Not exposed to or familiar with something specified; ignorant.
- Betraying or suggesting no deception or guile; artless.
- Candid; straightforward.
- Not dangerous or harmful; innocuous.
- Within, allowed by, or sanctioned by the law; lawful.
- Not guilty of a specific crime or offense; legally blameless.
- Uncorrupted by evil, malice, or wrongdoing; sinless.
- Used of things; lacking sense or awareness
- Free from sin
- Lacking intent or capacity to injure
- Free from evil or guilt
- Not experienced or worldly; naive.
- Lacking (something).
- Having no knowledge (of something).
- Harmless in intent.
- Naive; artless.
- Bearing no legal responsibility for a wrongful act.
- Free from guilt, sin, or immorality.
- A party who has not notice of a fact tainting a litigated transaction with illegality.
- Not contraband; not subject to forfeiture.
- Lacking in sophistication or worldliness
- Simple; artless; foolish.
- Free from the guilt of a particular crime or offense.
- Morally free from guilt; guiltless; not tainted with sin; pure; upright.
- Not harmful; free from that which can injure; innoxious; innocuous; harmless.
- Lawful; permitted.
- Justified, avenged or cleared of blame
- Freed from any question of guilt
INNOCENT vs VINDICATED: VERB
- N/A
- Simple past tense and past participle of vindicate.
INNOCENT vs VINDICATED: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Simple; wanting knowledge or sense; imbecile; idiotic.
- Artless; naïve.
- Free from illegality: as, innocent goods carried to a belligerent.
- Completely wanting or lacking
- Not knowledgeable about something specified
- Free from legal or specific wrong; guiltless: as, to be innocent of crime.
- Free from any moral wrong; not tainted with sin; upright; pure: as, innocent children; an innocent action.
- Free from any quality that can cause physical or moral injury; harmless in effect; innoxious.
- In pathology, benign; not malignant.
- Small, modest, and pretty: applied to children and flowers.
- N/A
INNOCENT vs VINDICATED: RELATED WORDS
- Irreproachable, Unimpeachable, Not guilty, Virtuous, Acquitted, Absolved, Vindicated, Harmless, Ignorant, Exculpated, Sinless, Naive, Exonerated, Blameless, Guiltless
- Reinforced, Bolstered, Substantiated, Reassured, Defended, Upheld, Justified, Clean handed, Clear, Cleared, Guiltless, Innocent, Absolved, Exculpated, Exonerated
INNOCENT vs VINDICATED: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Irreproachable, Unimpeachable, Not guilty, Virtuous, Acquitted, Absolved, Vindicated, Harmless, Ignorant, Exculpated, Sinless, Naive, Exonerated, Blameless, Guiltless
- Warranted, Reinforced, Bolstered, Substantiated, Reassured, Defended, Justified, Clean handed, Clear, Cleared, Guiltless, Innocent, Absolved, Exculpated, Exonerated
INNOCENT vs VINDICATED: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Names have been changed to protect the innocent.
- In criminal cases, the defendant is presumed innocent.
- The innocent spouse laudably can readmit the other spouse to conjugal life; in this case the innocent spouse renounces the right to separate.
- If the innocent spouse prevails for tax relief, the IRS should issue a partial release of any lien for the innocent spouse.
- Remember, you are innocent until proven guilty, not innocent until some unreliable witness points at you and calls you a criminal.
- People think he is innocent because they want to believe he is innocent.
- Pro Death Penalty Quotes This website is dedicated to the innocent unborn babies and the innocent victims of murder, may they always be remembered.
- Such apostates seek, in all dispensations, to bring destruction on the innocent and to shed innocent blood, or consent thereto.
- This innocent looking Santa Claus app is not as innocent as it seems.
- Speaking Deatj the innocent, my next point, an innocent person serving life can be released from death row.
- Such a vindication would need, itself, to be vindicated.
- Yet in a deeper sense Emiliani was vindicated.
- Messiah unless it vindicated what had gone before.
- Job anticipates he will be vindicated by God.
- Our approach was vindicated when the industry recovered.
- God vindicated Job in the eyes of others.
- In this way alone is flower art vindicated.
- SEC, the public interest has been sufficiently vindicated.
- Trump and his allies have declared themselves vindicated.
- Today, do you feel vindicated as an artist?.
INNOCENT vs VINDICATED: QUESTIONS
- What happens when police wrongfully arrest innocent civilians?
- What is innocent passage in international maritime law?
- What does Adyashanti say about innocent misunderstanding?
- Are online trading brokers scamming innocent people?
- How does innocent misrepresentation differs from mistake?
- Are the individuals depicted on lookwhogotbusted innocent?
- Are newspaper redesigns guilty until proven innocent?
- What makes innocent an attractive work environment?
- Do all children born innocent remain innocent all their lives?
- Should I read innocent before or after presumed innocent?
- Was McCarthyism vindicated by the McCarthyism revelations?
- Are Liverpool's Record kit sales vindicated by Nike sales?
- What games on Dreamcast vindicated your Dreamcast purchase?
- Do Pakistanis feel vindicated by their stand on Hindu-Muslim conflict?
- How would you use the word 'vindicated' in a sentence?
- Is Solomon's reference to the ant fully vindicated?
- What episode of the office does Kevin get vindicated?
- Will Jake Ejercito be vindicated after viral photo controversy?
- Was Billy Gundelfinger vindicated by the Law Society?
- Is the seed and soil hypothesis completely vindicated?