Doing vs Acquittal - What's the difference?
doing | acquittal | Related terms |
A deed or action, especially when somebody is held responsible for it.
The sound made by an elastic object when struck by or striking a hard object.
(legal) A legal decision that someone is not guilty with which they have been charged, or the formal dismissal of a charge by some other legal process.
Payment of a debt or other obligation; reparations, amends.
(rare) Avoidance of danger; deliverance.
Doing is a related term of acquittal.
As a verb doing
is (rare|chiefly|netherlands|nonstandard).As a noun acquittal is
.doing
English
Alternative forms
* (pedantic)Etymology 1
See (do).Noun
(en noun)- This is his doing . (= "He did it.")