Tilted Cat Head
Administrator
Location: Manhattan, NY
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American Heritage Dictionary
Quote:
pre·med·i·tate Audio Help (prē-měd'ĭ-tāt') Pronunciation Key - v. pre·med·i·tat·ed, pre·med·i·tat·ing, pre·med·i·tates
- v. tr. To plan, arrange, or plot (a crime, for example) in advance.
- v. intr. To reflect, ponder, or deliberate beforehand.
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Quote:
in·no·cent Audio Help (ĭn'ə-sənt) Pronunciation Key
adj.
Uncorrupted by evil, malice, or wrongdoing; sinless: an innocent child.
Not guilty of a specific crime or offense; legally blameless: was innocent of all charges.
Within, allowed by, or sanctioned by the law; lawful.
Not dangerous or harmful; innocuous: an innocent prank.
Candid; straightforward: a child's innocent stare.
Not experienced or worldly; naive.
Betraying or suggesting no deception or guile; artless.
Not exposed to or familiar with something specified; ignorant: American tourists wholly innocent of French.
Unaware: She remained innocent of the complications she had caused.
Not dangerous or harmful; innocuous: an innocent prank.
Candid; straightforward: a child's innocent stare.
Not experienced or worldly; naive.
Betraying or suggesting no deception or guile; artless.
Not exposed to or familiar with something specified; ignorant: American tourists wholly innocent of French.
Unaware: She remained innocent of the complications she had caused.
Not experienced or worldly; naive.
Betraying or suggesting no deception or guile; artless.
Not exposed to or familiar with something specified; ignorant: American tourists wholly innocent of French.
Unaware: She remained innocent of the complications she had caused.
Not exposed to or familiar with something specified; ignorant: American tourists wholly innocent of French.
Unaware: She remained innocent of the complications she had caused.
Lacking, deprived, or devoid of something: a novel innocent of literary merit.
n.
A person, especially a child, who is free of evil or sin.
A simple, guileless, inexperienced, or unsophisticated person.
A very young child.
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Nothing special or ominous about it. The definitions alone allow for them to work together without any predjudice. It's not even all that philosophical of a discussion as you've framed it. Pretty weak even. Premeditate is a verb, innocent an adjective. Why couldn't they be used together? It's not even like an oxymoron. Maybe you need to look up words in the dictionary and understand their definition before you try to pass judgement on them.
I'd say you've been watching too much CSI, Law & Order, and Boston Legal.
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