Home

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

The
sense
“not
correct”
developed
in
Middle
English,
while
the
moral
sense
emerged
later.
of
norms
or
duties.
In
law,
wrongdoing
and
wrongful
acts
describe
legally
actionable
harms
or
breaches
of
duty.
and
wrongdoing.
Antonyms
include
right,
correct,
true,
and
virtuous;
related
terms
include
erroneous,
false,
immoral,
and
unjust.
as
a
property
of
actions
or
beliefs
relative
to
normative
standards.