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All wrongness synonyms

wrong
W w

noun wrongness

  • crime β€” A crime is an illegal action or activity for which a person can be punished by law.
  • error β€” A mistake.
  • evil β€” Profoundly immoral and malevolent.
  • fault β€” a defect or imperfection; flaw; failing: a fault in the brakes; a fault in one's character.
  • guilt β€” the fact or state of having committed an offense, crime, violation, or wrong, especially against moral or penal law; culpability: He admitted his guilt.
  • immorality β€” immoral quality, character, or conduct; wickedness; evilness.
  • lust β€” intense sexual desire or appetite.
  • misdeed β€” an immoral or wicked deed.
  • offense β€” a violation or breaking of a social or moral rule; transgression; sin.
  • shortcoming β€” a failure, defect, or deficiency in conduct, condition, thought, ability, etc.: a social shortcoming; a shortcoming of his philosophy.
  • transgression β€” an act of transgressing; violation of a law, command, etc.; sin.
  • violation β€” the act of violating.
  • wrong β€” not in accordance with what is morally right or good: a wrong deed.
  • wrongdoing β€” behavior or action that is wrong, evil, or blameworthy.
  • anger β€” Anger is the strong emotion that you feel when you think that someone has behaved in an unfair, cruel, or unacceptable way.
  • covetousness β€” inordinately or wrongly desirous of wealth or possessions; greedy.
  • damnation β€” According to some religions, if someone suffers damnation, they have to stay in hell for ever after they have died because of their sins.
  • debt β€” A debt is a sum of money that you owe someone.
  • deficiency β€” Deficiency in something, especially something that your body needs, is not having enough of it.
  • demerit β€” The demerits of something or someone are their faults or disadvantages.
  • disobedience β€” lack of obedience or refusal to comply; disregard or transgression.
  • envy β€” A feeling of discontented or resentful longing aroused by someone else's possessions, qualities, or luck.
  • gluttony β€” excessive eating and drinking.
  • imperfection β€” an imperfect detail; flaw: a law full of imperfections.
  • iniquity β€” gross injustice or wickedness.
  • peccadillo β€” a very minor or slight sin or offense; a trifling fault.
  • pride β€” Thomas, died 1658, English soldier and regicide.
  • sinfulness β€” characterized by, guilty of, or full of sin; wicked: a sinful life.
  • sloth β€” habitual disinclination to exertion; indolence; laziness.
  • tort β€” a wrongful act, not including a breach of contract or trust, that results in injury to another's person, property, reputation, or the like, and for which the injured party is entitled to compensation.
  • trespass β€” Law. an unlawful act causing injury to the person, property, or rights of another, committed with force or violence, actual or implied. a wrongful entry upon the lands of another. the action to recover damages for such an injury.
  • ungodly β€” not accepting God or a particular religious doctrine; irreligious; atheistic: an ungodly era.
  • unrighteousness β€” not righteous; not upright or virtuous; wicked; sinful; evil: an unrighteous king.
  • vice β€” any of various devices, usually having two jaws that may be brought together or separated by means of a screw, lever, or the like, used to hold an object firmly while work is being done on it.
  • wickedness β€” the quality or state of being wicked.
  • peccable β€” liable to sin or error.
  • peccancy β€” sinning; guilty of a moral offense.
  • veniality β€” able to be forgiven or pardoned; not seriously wrong, as a sin (opposed to mortal).
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