negligent guilt

  • 71Murder–suicide — Suicide Social …

    Wikipedia

  • 72force — 1 n 1: a cause of motion, activity, or change intervening force: a force that acts after another s negligent act or omission has occurred and that causes injury to another: intervening cause at cause irresistible force: an unforeseeable event esp …

    Law dictionary

  • 73moral luck — (MOHR.ul luk) n. The principle that the perceived morality of a person s actions sometimes depends on luck or chance. Example Citation: Kant sought to make morality as pure and disconnected as possible from the vagaries of circumstance and… …

    New words

  • 74 — 【고】 허물; 반드시; 저버리다 (孤) ; 막다; 찢어발기다; 대강 辛부 5획 (총12획) [1] sin; crime; criminal offense; guilt [2] [v] be negligent in an obligation or expectation; fail [3] a Chinese familly name …

    Hanja (Korean Hanzi) dictionary

  • 75bad — adjective 1) bad workmanship Syn: substandard, poor, inferior, second rate, second class, unsatisfactory, inadequate, unacceptable, not up to scratch, not up to par, deficient, imperfect, defective, faulty, shoddy, amateurish …

    Thesaurus of popular words

  • 76HOMICIDE — The shedding of blood (shefikhut damim) is the primeval sin (Gen. 4:8) and throughout the centuries ranks in Jewish law as the gravest and most reprehensible of all offenses (cf. Maim. Guide, 3:41, and Yad, Roẓe aḥ 1:4); violence in Genesis 6:13… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 77MISHNAH — (Heb. מִשְׁנָה). The term mishnah is used in a number of different ways (see below), but when used as a proper noun ( the Mishnah ) it designates the collection of rabbinic traditions redacted by Rabbi judah ha nasi (usually called simply Rabbi ) …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism