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Dan
Guilt?
Hello,
I know 'guilt' is mostly used as a noun, but just heard from somebody in a sitcom that she said as below.
"You don't have to guilt me, I will do it."
Can anybody let me clarify this and how to understand the meaning of it?
Thank you.
Dan
May 4, 2019 6:25 PM
Answers · 4
1
Colloquially “Guilt” is used as a verb.
“You don’t have to guilt me, I will do it.” (You don’t have to motivate me to do something by making me feel guilty if I don’t. I will do it)
She’s guilting me into helping her move. (She’s motivating me to help her move by bringing up how difficult her situation will be if I don’t help her)
It’s a fairly new use and probably not approved by all. Similar to “shame”
May 4, 2019
1
It seems this character's phrasing is a shortened form of "to guilt someone into doing something", which means to persuade someone do something that they wouldn't otherwise want to do.
For example:
She guilted me into going with her even though she knows I hate shopping!
Don't guilt me into making me see her. She started the fight!
May 4, 2019
I know that we use this as a noun , most of the time we say " feeling guilty about or to feel guilty about " or " to confess guilt" , " to plead guilty" like that
But as a verb I don't know actually
May 4, 2019
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Dan
Language Skills
English, Korean
Learning Language
English
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