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单词 innocence
释义

innocence


in·no·cence

I0152200 (ĭn′ə-səns)n.1. The state, quality, or virtue of being innocent, especially:a. Freedom from sin, moral wrong, or guilt through lack of knowledge of evil.b. Guiltlessness of a specific legal crime or offense.c. Freedom from guile, cunning, or deceit; simplicity or artlessness.d. Lack of worldliness or sophistication; naiveté.2. One that is innocent.

innocence

(ˈɪnəsəns) nthe quality or state of being innocent. Archaic word: innocency [C14: from Latin innocentia harmlessness, from innocēns doing no harm, blameless, from in-1 + nocēns harming, from nocēre to hurt, harm; see noxious]

in•no•cence

(ˈɪn ə səns)

n. 1. the quality or state of being innocent; freedom from sin or moral wrong. 2. freedom from legal or specific wrong. 3. simplicity; absence of guile or cunning; naiveté. 4. lack of knowledge or understanding. 5. harmlessness. 6. chastity. 7. an innocent person or thing. 8. bluet (def. 1). [1300–50; Middle English < Latin]

Innocence

 

See Also: HARMLESSNESS

  1. Green as apples —Sumner Locke Elliott
  2. Guileless as old Huck —Richard Ford
  3. Guiltless forever, like a tree —Robert Browning
  4. Innocence is like an umbrella: when once we’ve lost it we must never hope to see it back again —Punch
  5. (Catherine’s) innocence shone like an icon —Rita Mae Brown
  6. Innocent and affectionate as a child —W. H. Hudson
  7. Innocent and artless, like the growth of a flower —Isak Dinesen
  8. Innocent as a baby —Anon
  9. Innocent as a child unborn —Anon

    Jonathan Swift who used the phrase in Directions to Servants is often credited as its author.

  10. (I was a neophyte about as) innocent as a choirboy being asked to conduct a solemn mass at the Vatican —Alistair Cooke, New York Times interview, January 19, 1986
  11. Innocent as a curl —Clarence Major
  12. Innocent as a devil of two years old —Jonathan Swift
  13. Innocent as a game —Frank Tuohy
  14. Innocent as a new-laid egg —W. S. Gilbert
  15. Innocent as a snowflake —Anne Sexton
  16. (Gaze as) innocent as a teddy bear —Babs H. Deal
  17. Innocent as a tourist’s Kodak —William Mcllvanney
  18. Innocent, like a hornet that has been disarmed —Jean Stafford
  19. (Sat there as) innocently as small boys confiding to each other the names of toy animals —Henry James
  20. Innocuous as flowers afloat in a pond —John Updike
  21. Perennial innocence like a chicken in a pen —William Faulkner
  22. She was like a young tree whose branches had never been touched by the ruthless hand of man —Katherine Mansfield
Thesaurus
Noun1.innocence - the quality of innocent naiveteinnocence - the quality of innocent naivete artlessness, ingenuousness, naturalnessnaiveness, naivete, naivety - lack of sophistication or worldlinessinnocency - an innocent quality or thing or act; "the innocencies of childhood"
2.innocence - the state of being unsullied by sin or moral wrong; lacking a knowledge of evilsinlessness, whiteness, pureness, puritycondition, status - a state at a particular time; "a condition (or state) of disrepair"; "the current status of the arms negotiations"cleanness - without moral defects
3.innocence - a state or condition of being innocent of a specific crime or offense; "the trial established his innocence"condition, status - a state at a particular time; "a condition (or state) of disrepair"; "the current status of the arms negotiations"blamelessness, guiltlessness, inculpability, inculpableness - a state of innocenceclear - the state of being free of suspicion; "investigation showed that he was in the clear"guilt, guiltiness - the state of having committed an offense

innocence

noun1. naiveté, simplicity, inexperience, freshness, credulity, gullibility, ingenuousness, artlessness, unworldliness, guilelessness, credulousness, simpleness, trustfulness, unsophistication, naiveness the sweet innocence of youth
naiveté cunning, guile, worldliness, artfulness, disingenuousness, wiliness
2. blamelessness, righteousness, clean hands, uprightness, sinlessness, irreproachability, guiltlessness He claims to have evidence which could prove his innocence.
blamelessness guilt, sinfulness, corruption, impurity, offensiveness, wrongness
3. chastity, virtue, purity, modesty, virginity, celibacy, continence, maidenhood, stainlessness She can still evoke the innocence of 14-year-old Juliet.4. ignorance, oblivion, lack of knowledge, inexperience, unfamiliarity, greenness, unawareness, nescience (literary) 'Maybe innocence is bliss,' he suggested.Quotations
"He's armed without that's innocent within" [Alexander Pope Epilogue to the Satires]
"Those who are incapable of committing great crimes do not readily suspect them in others" [La Rochefoucauld Maxims]
"Whoever blushes is already guilty; true innocence is ashamed of nothing" [Jean Jacques Rousseau Émile]
"It's innocence when it charms us, ignorance when it doesn't" [Mignon McLaughlin The Neurotic's Notebook]

innocence

noun1. The condition of being chaste:chastity, decency, modesty, purity, virginity, virtue, virtuousness.2. The condition of being uninformed or unaware:ignorance, nescience, obliviousness, unawareness, unconsciousness, unfamiliarity.
Translations
天真无辜清白

innocent

(ˈinəsnt) adjective1. not guilty (of a crime, misdeed etc). A man should be presumed innocent of a crime until he is proved guilty; They hanged an innocent man. 清白的 清白的2. (of an action etc) harmless or without harmful or hidden intentions. innocent games and amusements; an innocent remark. 無害的,沒有惡意的 无害的,没有恶意的 3. free from, or knowing nothing about, evil etc. an innocent child; You can't be so innocent as to believe what advertisements say! 天真的 天真的ˈinnocently adverb 清白地, 沒有惡意地,天真地 清白地,无罪地,天真地 ˈinnocence nounHe at last managed to prove his innocence; the innocence of a child. 清白,無惡意,天真 清白,无辜,天真

innocence


be the picture of (something)

The ideal example of something (which is listed after "of"). Yes, Jill was in the hospital a few months ago, but she's the picture of health now. We went running together just the other day.See also: of, picture

in all innocence

1. Without ill or malicious thought or intention. Witnesses testifying on her behalf claim the woman smuggled the medication in all innocence, with the sole aim of helping a suffering family member who could not afford treatment. I'm reminded of the scene in the original Frankenstein film, where the monster, in all innocence, tosses the little girl into the lake because he saw her doing the same to her flower petals.2. Without knowledge or awareness of the significance of something or some situation; naïvely or guilelessly. The precocious child asked the pilot, in all innocence, how likely it is for a plane to crash. The student stared at me blankly and then asked, in all innocence, if she should be taking notes on the lecture.See also: all, innocence

in all innocence

without knowledge of something's significance or possible consequences. 1992 Jeff Torrington Swing Hammer Swing! I'd given him the matches in all innocence but that didn't let me off the hook. See also: all, innocence

innocence


innocence,

in botany: see maddermadder,
common name for the Rubiaceae, a family of chiefly tropical and subtropical trees, shrubs, and herbs, especially abundant in N South America. The family is important economically for several tropical crops, e.g., coffee, quinine, and ipecac, and for many ornamentals, e.g.
..... Click the link for more information.
.

Innocence

See also Inexperience, Naïveté.Inquisitiveness (See CURIOSITY.)Insanity (See MADNESS.)Adam and Evenaked in Eden; knew no shame. [O.T.: Genesis 2:25]ArjunaSanskrit name means sinless. [Hindu Myth.: Benét, 50]Babes in the Woodinnocent children are lost in the wood and die. [Br. Lit.: Babes in the Wood, Walsh Classical, 42]basin and ewerPilate’s guiltlessness signified by washing of hands. [N.T.: Matthew 27:24]Budd, Billyfriendly sailor; held in warm affection by crew. [Am. Lit.: Billy Budd]Christabelfree of evil. [Br. Lit.: “Christabel” in Walsh Modern, 95]Cinderellawith fairy godmother’s aid, poor maligned girl wins prince’s heart. [Fr. Fairy Tale: Cinderella]Cio-Cio-Sanbelieves marriage to Pinkerton is real. [Ital. Opera: Puccini, Madama Butterfly, Westerman, 357]daisysymbol of blamelessness. [Flower Symbolism: Flora Symbolica, 173; Kunz, 328]Delano, Amasanaive, goodhearted captain rescues captive captain from mutineers. [Am. Lit.: Benito Cereno]Desdemonablamelessness martyred through slander. [Br. Lit.: Othello]Hallyard, St. Norwegian martyred in defense of guiltless woman. [Christian Hagiog.: Attwater, 165]Heidihas instinct for goodness. [Children’s Lit.: Heidi]Imogenchaste wife unjustly suspected by Postumus of unfaithfulness. [Br. Drama: Shakespeare Cymbeline]lambattribute of young woman; personification of guiltlessness. [Art: Hall, 161]Minniefemale saloonkeeper in mining town; never been kissed. [Ital. Opera: Puccini, Girl of the Golden West, Westerman, 360–361]Pedroin marrying former mistress of enemy. [Ger. Opera: d’Albert, Tief land, Westerman, 371–374]Pinch, Tomguileless, with unbounded goodness of heart. [Br. Lit.: Martin Chuzzlewit]Rimabeautiful jungle girl, lover of birds and animals, knows neither evil nor guile. [Br. Lit.: Hudson Green Mansions in Magill I, 333]Susannaunjustly condemned for adultery; later acquitted. [Apocrypha: Daniel and Susanna]
MedicalSeeinnocent

Innocence


INNOCENCE, The absence of guilt.
2. The law presumes in favor of innocence, even against another presumption of law: for example, when a woman marries a second husband within the space of twelve months after her husband had left the country, the presumption of innocence preponderates over the presumption of the continuance of life. 2 B. & A. 386 3 Stark. Ev. 1249. An exception to this rule respecting the presumption of innocence has been made in the case of the publication of a libel, the principal being presumed to have authorized the sale, when a libel is sold by his agent in his usual place of doing business. 1 Russ. on Cr. 341; 10 Johns. R. 443; Bull. N. P. 6; Greenl. Ev. Sec. 36. See 4 Nev. & M. 341; 2 Ad. & Ell. 540; 5 Barn. & Ad. 86; 1 Stark. N. P. C. 21; 2 Nov. & M. 219.

innocence


  • noun

Synonyms for innocence

noun naiveté

Synonyms

  • naiveté
  • simplicity
  • inexperience
  • freshness
  • credulity
  • gullibility
  • ingenuousness
  • artlessness
  • unworldliness
  • guilelessness
  • credulousness
  • simpleness
  • trustfulness
  • unsophistication
  • naiveness

Antonyms

  • cunning
  • guile
  • worldliness
  • artfulness
  • disingenuousness
  • wiliness

noun blamelessness

Synonyms

  • blamelessness
  • righteousness
  • clean hands
  • uprightness
  • sinlessness
  • irreproachability
  • guiltlessness

Antonyms

  • guilt
  • sinfulness
  • corruption
  • impurity
  • offensiveness
  • wrongness

noun chastity

Synonyms

  • chastity
  • virtue
  • purity
  • modesty
  • virginity
  • celibacy
  • continence
  • maidenhood
  • stainlessness

noun ignorance

Synonyms

  • ignorance
  • oblivion
  • lack of knowledge
  • inexperience
  • unfamiliarity
  • greenness
  • unawareness
  • nescience

Synonyms for innocence

noun the condition of being chaste

Synonyms

  • chastity
  • decency
  • modesty
  • purity
  • virginity
  • virtue
  • virtuousness

noun the condition of being uninformed or unaware

Synonyms

  • ignorance
  • nescience
  • obliviousness
  • unawareness
  • unconsciousness
  • unfamiliarity

Synonyms for innocence

noun the quality of innocent naivete

Synonyms

  • artlessness
  • ingenuousness
  • naturalness

Related Words

  • naiveness
  • naivete
  • naivety
  • innocency

noun the state of being unsullied by sin or moral wrong

Synonyms

  • sinlessness
  • whiteness
  • pureness
  • purity

Related Words

  • condition
  • status
  • cleanness

noun a state or condition of being innocent of a specific crime or offense

Related Words

  • condition
  • status
  • blamelessness
  • guiltlessness
  • inculpability
  • inculpableness
  • clear

Antonyms

  • guilt
  • guiltiness
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更新时间:2025/2/27 13:37:21