Wrong
Wrong is a word in English that functions as an adjective, a noun, a verb, and, to a lesser extent, an adverb. Its core sense is deviation from what is correct, true, or proper. As an adjective, something is wrong if it is incorrect or morally improper: a wrong answer; a wrong assumption; a wrong action. As a noun, a wrong can be a harm, injustice, or violation: to commit a wrong; to suffer a wrong. As a verb, to wrong someone is to treat them unjustly or to cause them harm. As an adverb, wrong is typically informal; the standard adverb form is wrongly.
Etymology: from Old English wrang, meaning crooked or twisted, related to cognates in other West Germanic languages.
Usage and sense distinctions: factual wrongness concerns errors or falsehoods; moral or ethical wrongness concerns violations
Common phrases include: go wrong, do the wrong thing, the wrong person, the wrong turn, the wrongdoer,
See also: ethics, justice, error, mistake; in philosophy and jurisprudence, the concept of wrongness is analyzed