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One way to be accused
Answer for the clue "One way to be accused ", 7 letters:
wrongly
Alternative clues for the word wrongly
Word definitions for wrongly in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
adverb COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES spell sth wrong/wrongly ▪ You’ve spelled my name wrong. wrongly/rightly ▪ This hotel can rightly claim that it has some of the best views on the island. COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS ■ VERB accuse ▪ The nightmare of being ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
adv. 1 In an unfair or immoral manner; unjustly. 2 incorrectly; by error.
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
c.1300, from wrong (adj.) + -ly (2).
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
adv. without justice or fairness; "wouldst not play false and yet would wrongly win"- Shakespeare in an incorrect manner; "she guessed wrong" [syn: incorrectly , wrong ] [ant: correctly , correctly ]
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Wrongly \Wrong"ly\, adv. In a wrong manner; unjustly; erroneously; wrong; amiss; as, he judges wrongly of my motives. ``And yet wouldst wrongly win.'' --Shak.
Usage examples of wrongly.
We moved then to the question of how her aphonia, which I had wrongly thought at first to be connected to her anxiety about speaking a foreign language3 while temporarily removed from the company of the man she loved.
Their articulation is without defect, but what they say is unintelligible because the words are mutilated and used wrongly.
No introductions took place, and I read the tact of the witty hunchback in the omission, but as all the guests were men used to the manners of the court, that neglect of etiquette did not prevent them from paying every honour to my lovely friend, who received their compliments with that ease and good breeding which are known only in France, and even there only in the highest society, with the exception, however, of a few French provinces in which the nobility, wrongly called good society, shew rather too openly the haughtiness which is characteristic of that class.
I was beginning to forget the adventure, probably because I thought, rightly or wrongly, that I had put an insurmountable barrier between the nun and myself, when, ten days after I had sent my letter, as I was coming out of the opera, I met my messenger, lantern in hand.
I wrote to the noblest of women, whom in my unreasonable spite I had judged so wrongly.
He neither understood how wrongly he had acted, nor how the count was constrained to punish him publicly as a cloak to the honour of his daughter and his house.
On the second board this error caused a mistake in double integration, two integrands having been wrongly consolidated.
The pinko Democrats have taken the tack of jigaboos wrongly accused, intend to press the issue during the primary elections, and the Republican A.
For a moment, he hoped that he had kithed ideoplasts wrongly, and so he stared at the glittering glyphs until his eyes burned and there could be no mistaking their meaning.
It was fifty years ago that I encountered these marvelous people, when I sailed with his excellency the illustrious Don Juan Ponce de Leon on his famous and disastrous voyage in quest of what is wrongly called the Fountain of Youth.
But in English, when we have used a word a couple of times in a paragraph, we imagine we are growing tautological, and so we are weak enough to exchange it for some other word which only approximates exactness, to escape what we wrongly fancy is a greater blemish.
In the nominative case, an erroneous accent over the antepenult indicates that you take the last letter of the word immediately following the one wrongly accented, and so forth.
One facet of their ploy was to claim that all Kings since the Abdication of Chivalry were pretenders, that the bastardy of FitzChivalry Farseer was wrongly construed as an obstacle to his inheriting the throne.
Above its archways and gables the evening sky is full of our unmentionable mistakes, hydrocephalic clouds and the wrongly curved palate of the west, and the cinders of our fires.
Such lumbering logomachy is always injurious and oppressive to men of spirit, imagination or intellectual honour, and it has dealt very recklessly and wrongly with Bernard Shaw.