The word 'guilt' is one of the most etymologically mysterious words in the English language. Its Old English form 'gylt' meant 'crime, sin, fault, offense' and also 'fine, debt, payment for a transgression.' Despite its fundamental importance to law, morality, and psychology, its deeper origin remains uncertain — a gap in the record that has produced several competing theories.
The most widely discussed proposal connects 'gylt' to Old English 'gieldan' (to pay, to yield, to render what is due), from Proto-Germanic *geldaną (to pay, to be worth, to render). This root produced German 'Geld' (money), Dutch 'geld' (money), Norwegian 'gjeld' (debt), and English 'yield' (to give way, to produce — originally 'to pay, to render'). If this connection is correct, guilt is etymologically a debt — a moral obligation created by wrongdoing that demands payment. The legal sense (criminal guilt as a
This debt-metaphor interpretation is compelling because it aligns with how guilt functions in both legal and emotional contexts. In law, guilt creates an obligation: the guilty party must 'pay their debt to society' through punishment. In psychology, guilt creates a felt obligation: the guilty person feels they owe something — an apology, restitution, penance. The language of moral debt permeates English
Old English 'gylt' encompassed both the objective condition (having committed a crime) and the subjective feeling (the painful awareness of having done wrong). Modern English preserves this duality: 'guilt' can mean the legal fact ('the jury found his guilt') or the emotion ('she was consumed by guilt'). The relationship between these two senses is not incidental — the legal concept grew out of the emotional one, or vice versa, and neither can be fully understood without the other.
The word 'guilty' (from Old English 'gyltig') has been the standard legal verdict in English-speaking courts for over a thousand years. The phrase 'guilty as charged' and the courtroom question 'How do you plead, guilty or not guilty?' are among the most consequential uses of any English word — a single adjective that determines liberty or imprisonment, life or death.
Guilt has no true cognates outside of English. German 'Schuld' (guilt, debt, fault) is a different word entirely (though it fascinatingly combines the same two meanings — moral guilt and financial debt — suggesting the guilt-as-debt metaphor is deeply embedded in Germanic thinking). The isolation of 'guilt' within Germanic languages, combined with its uncertain deeper etymology, has led some scholars to speculate that it may be a very early English innovation — a word coined by the Anglo-Saxons rather than inherited from the common Germanic ancestor.