dict_dl/en_MW_thesaurus/wr_mwt.json
2022-07-08 14:36:55 +00:00

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{
"wrangled":{
"to express different opinions about something often angrily":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"a town meeting at which local residents wrangled for hours about property taxes"
],
"near antonyms":[
"coexisted",
"got along",
"accepted",
"agreed",
"assented",
"concurred",
"consented"
],
"related":[
"challenged",
"dared",
"defied",
"clashed",
"contended",
"contested",
"tangled",
"caviled",
"cavilled",
"fussed",
"nitpicked",
"considered",
"debated",
"discussed",
"kicked",
"objected",
"protested"
],
"synonyms":[
"altercated",
"argued",
"argufied",
"bickered",
"brabbled",
"brawled",
"controverted",
"disputed",
"fell out",
"fought",
"hassled",
"jarred",
"quarreled",
"quarrelled",
"quibbled",
"rowed",
"scrapped",
"spatted",
"squabbled",
"tiffed"
]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"wreak":{
"to cause to suffer punishment or vengeance for":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"wreaked their vengeance on those they considered enemies"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[],
"synonyms":[]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"wrestle (with)":{
"to give serious and careful thought to":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"I've been wrestling with the idea of switching careers for quite some time"
],
"near antonyms":[
"disregard",
"ignore",
"overlook",
"slight",
"dismiss",
"pooh-pooh",
"pooh",
"reject"
],
"related":[
"muse (upon)",
"reflect (on or upon)",
"reminisce",
"analyze",
"explore",
"review",
"conclude",
"reason",
"second-guess",
"speculate (about)",
"brood (about or over)",
"dwell (on or upon)",
"fixate (on or upon)",
"fret (about or over)",
"obsess (about or over)",
"believe",
"conceive",
"opine",
"absorb",
"assimilate",
"digest",
"drink (in)"
],
"synonyms":[
"chew over",
"cogitate",
"consider",
"contemplate",
"debate",
"deliberate",
"entertain",
"eye",
"kick around",
"meditate",
"mull (over)",
"perpend",
"ponder",
"pore (over)",
"question",
"revolve",
"ruminate",
"study",
"think (about or over)",
"turn",
"weigh"
]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"wrestling":{
"to seize and attempt to unbalance one another for the purpose of achieving physical mastery":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"the sisters wrestled on the floor over the last cookie"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[
"battling",
"clashing (with)",
"combating",
"combatting",
"contending",
"dueling",
"duelling",
"fighting",
"warring (against)",
"bashing",
"battering",
"beating",
"buffeting",
"hitting",
"punching",
"slugging",
"striking",
"boxing",
"sparring",
"brawling",
"skirmishing"
],
"synonyms":[
"grappling",
"rassling",
"scuffling",
"tussling"
]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"wrests":{
"to draw out by force or with effort":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"the boy wrested the book out of his sister's hands"
],
"near antonyms":[
"implants",
"inserts",
"installs",
"instills",
"crams",
"jams",
"rams",
"stuffs",
"wedges"
],
"related":[
"mines",
"plucks",
"removes",
"takes (out)",
"withdraws"
],
"synonyms":[
"corkscrews",
"extracts",
"pries",
"prizes",
"pulls",
"roots (out)",
"tears (out)",
"uproots",
"wrings",
"yanks"
]
},
"to get (as money) by the use of force or threats":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"vowed that the bully had wrested his lunch money from him for the last time"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[
"bleeds",
"fleeces",
"gouges",
"milks",
"skins",
"squeezes",
"cheats",
"racketeers",
"swindles",
"coerces",
"compels",
"forces"
],
"synonyms":[
"exacts",
"extorts",
"wrings"
]
},
"to get with great difficulty":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"farmers who were used to wresting a living from the harsh land"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[
"acquires",
"attains",
"draws",
"earns",
"gains",
"lands",
"obtains",
"procures",
"secures"
],
"synonyms":[
"ekes (out)",
"scrapes (up or together)",
"scrounges",
"squeezes",
"wrings"
]
},
"to move by or as if by a forceful rotation":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"I need a strong arm to wrest the lid off this pickle jar"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[
"draws",
"dredges (up)",
"extracts",
"jerks",
"lugs",
"plucks",
"pulls",
"tugs",
"tweaks",
"yanks",
"jimmies",
"levers",
"pries",
"budges",
"dislocates",
"displaces",
"disturbs",
"removes",
"shifts",
"transfers",
"transposes"
],
"synonyms":[
"twists",
"wrenches",
"wrings"
]
},
"to separate or remove by forceful pulling":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"wrested open the stuck door of the cabinet"
],
"near antonyms":[
"reattaches"
],
"related":[
"grabs",
"nabs",
"seizes",
"snaps (up)",
"snatches",
"lops (off)",
"nips",
"amputates",
"cuts (off)",
"dissevers",
"severs",
"extracts",
"forces",
"jerks",
"pries",
"prizes",
"pulls",
"roots (out)",
"uproots"
],
"synonyms":[
"rips",
"tears",
"wrenches",
"yanks"
]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"wretches":{
"a mean, evil, or unprincipled person":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"the clerk was an ungrateful wretch who stole money from his employer's cash register"
],
"near antonyms":[
"angels",
"innocents",
"saints",
"heroes"
],
"related":[
"villainesses",
"blackguards",
"criminals",
"crooks",
"culprits",
"felons",
"lawbreakers",
"malefactors",
"offenders",
"perpetrators",
"perps",
"transgressors",
"sinners",
"trespassers",
"wrongdoers",
"cads",
"heels",
"serpents",
"snakes",
"vipers",
"bandits",
"bravos",
"bravoes",
"desperadoes",
"desperados",
"outlaws",
"cons",
"convicts",
"jailbirds",
"assassins",
"cutthroats",
"gangsters",
"goons",
"gunmen",
"hoodlums",
"hooligans",
"racketeers",
"ruffians",
"thugs",
"roughs",
"rowdies",
"toughs",
"losers",
"lowlifes",
"lowlives",
"ne'er-do-wells",
"stinkers",
"trash"
],
"synonyms":[
"baddies",
"beasts",
"brutes",
"caitiffs",
"devils",
"evildoers",
"fiends",
"heavies",
"hounds",
"knaves",
"meanies",
"miscreants",
"monsters",
"nazis",
"no-goods",
"rapscallions",
"rascals",
"reprobates",
"rogues",
"savages",
"scalawags",
"scallywags",
"scamps",
"scapegraces",
"scoundrels",
"varlets",
"villains"
]
},
"type":[
"noun"
]
},
"wriggled":{
"to introduce in a gradual, secret, or clever way":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"within a month of his arrival, this social upstart had wriggled himself into the family's good graces"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[
"crept",
"edged",
"wiggled",
"inserted",
"interpolated",
"interposed",
"introduced"
],
"synonyms":[
"infiltrated",
"insinuated",
"slipped",
"sneaked",
"snuck",
"worked in",
"wormed",
"wound",
"winded"
]
},
"to make jerky or restless movements":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"a toddler wriggling in his seat all throughout the church service"
],
"near antonyms":[
"relaxed",
"rested",
"unwound",
"calmed (down)",
"stilled"
],
"related":[
"flitted",
"fluttered",
"twittered",
"quaked",
"quivered",
"shivered",
"shook",
"shuddered",
"trembled",
"paced"
],
"synonyms":[
"fiddled",
"fidgeted",
"jerked",
"jigged",
"jiggled",
"squiggled",
"squirmed",
"thrashed",
"threshed",
"tossed",
"twisted",
"twitched",
"wiggled",
"writhed"
]
},
"to move slowly with the body close to the ground":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"a worm slowly wriggled across the sidewalk"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[
"crouched",
"squatted",
"edged",
"inched",
"nosed",
"skulked",
"sneaked",
"snuck",
"stole",
"tiptoed"
],
"synonyms":[
"bellied",
"crawled",
"crept",
"groveled",
"grovelled",
"slid",
"slithered",
"snaked",
"wormed"
]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"wring (out)":{
"as in dry , drain":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[],
"synonyms":[]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"wrings":{
"to draw out by force or with effort":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"willing to use torture if necessary in order to wring the information out of the terrorist"
],
"near antonyms":[
"implants",
"inserts",
"installs",
"instills",
"crams",
"jams",
"rams",
"stuffs",
"wedges"
],
"related":[
"mines",
"plucks",
"removes",
"takes (out)",
"withdraws"
],
"synonyms":[
"corkscrews",
"extracts",
"pries",
"prizes",
"pulls",
"roots (out)",
"tears (out)",
"uproots",
"wrests",
"yanks"
]
},
"to get (as money) by the use of force or threats":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"that bill collector is willing to do anything to wring money out of deadbeats"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[
"bleeds",
"fleeces",
"gouges",
"milks",
"skins",
"squeezes",
"cheats",
"racketeers",
"swindles",
"coerces",
"compels",
"forces"
],
"synonyms":[
"exacts",
"extorts",
"wrests"
]
},
"to get with great difficulty":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"after years of trying to wring a decent profit out of the business, he is finally giving up"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[
"acquires",
"attains",
"draws",
"earns",
"gains",
"lands",
"obtains",
"procures",
"secures"
],
"synonyms":[
"ekes (out)",
"scrapes (up or together)",
"scrounges",
"squeezes",
"wrests"
]
},
"to move by or as if by a forceful rotation":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"I'm so mad I could wring your neck"
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[
"draws",
"dredges (up)",
"extracts",
"jerks",
"lugs",
"plucks",
"pulls",
"tugs",
"tweaks",
"yanks",
"jimmies",
"levers",
"pries",
"budges",
"dislocates",
"displaces",
"disturbs",
"removes",
"shifts",
"transfers",
"transposes"
],
"synonyms":[
"twists",
"wrenches",
"wrests"
]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"write up":{
"a written description or review of something":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"There's a write-up of the restaurant in the paper."
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[],
"synonyms":[]
},
"as in write , describe":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[],
"synonyms":[]
},
"type":[
"noun",
"verb"
]
},
"write-up":{
"a written description or review of something":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[
"There's a write-up of the restaurant in the paper."
],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[],
"synonyms":[]
},
"as in":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[],
"synonyms":[]
},
"type":[
"noun",
"verb"
]
},
"writes off":{
"to diminish the price or value of":{
"antonyms":[
"appreciates",
"enhances",
"marks up",
"upgrades"
],
"examples":[
"that one blunder will write off to nothing all the goodwill we've been building up"
],
"near antonyms":[
"bloats",
"blows up",
"inflates",
"overestimates",
"overprices",
"overrates",
"overvalues",
"adds",
"aggrandizes",
"amplifies",
"augments",
"balloons",
"boosts",
"compounds",
"dilates",
"enlarges",
"escalates",
"expands",
"extends",
"heightens",
"increases",
"maximizes",
"multiplies",
"raises",
"swells",
"ups"
],
"related":[
"debases",
"demonetizes",
"underestimates",
"underprices",
"underrates",
"undervalues",
"abridges",
"compresses",
"contracts",
"de-escalates",
"deflates",
"downsizes",
"dwindles",
"lessens",
"moderates",
"shrinks"
],
"synonyms":[
"attenuates",
"breaks",
"cheapens",
"depreciates",
"depresses",
"devaluates",
"devalues",
"downgrades",
"lowers",
"marks down",
"reduces",
"sinks",
"writes down"
]
},
"to express scornfully one's low opinion of":{
"antonyms":[
"acclaims",
"applauds",
"exalts",
"extols",
"extolls",
"glorifies",
"lauds",
"magnifies",
"praises"
],
"examples":[
"most critics have already written off that director as a hack incapable of turning out anything but schlock"
],
"near antonyms":[
"approves",
"countenances",
"endorses",
"indorses",
"favors",
"recommends",
"sanctions",
"commends",
"compliments",
"eulogizes"
],
"related":[
"discommends",
"abuses",
"scolds",
"disapproves (of)",
"dislikes",
"censures",
"condemns",
"criticizes",
"denounces",
"reprehends",
"reprobates",
"asperses",
"defames",
"maligns",
"rips",
"slanders",
"slurs",
"traduces",
"vilifies",
"discredits",
"disgraces"
],
"synonyms":[
"bad-mouths",
"belittles",
"cries down",
"decries",
"denigrates",
"deprecates",
"depreciates",
"derogates",
"diminishes",
"discounts",
"dismisses",
"disparages",
"disses",
"kisses off",
"minimizes",
"plays down",
"poor-mouths",
"puts down",
"runs down",
"talks down",
"trashes",
"trash-talks",
"vilipends"
]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"writes up":{
"as in writes , describes":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[],
"synonyms":[]
},
"type":[
"verb"
]
},
"wrong":{
"as in burn , victimize":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[],
"synonyms":[]
},
"falling short of a standard":{
"antonyms":[
"acceptable",
"adequate",
"all right",
"decent",
"fine",
"OK",
"okay",
"passable",
"respectable",
"satisfactory",
"standard",
"tolerable"
],
"examples":[
"there is something wrong with this cake\u2014it has a funny taste"
],
"near antonyms":[
"classic",
"classical",
"A1",
"bang-up",
"banner",
"boss",
"capital",
"choice",
"crackerjack",
"dandy",
"divine",
"excellent",
"exceptional",
"fabulous",
"first-class",
"first-rate",
"grand",
"great",
"groovy",
"heavenly",
"high-test",
"jim-dandy",
"keen",
"marvelous",
"marvellous",
"mean",
"neat",
"nifty",
"noble",
"par excellence",
"perfect",
"premium",
"prime",
"sensational",
"slick",
"splendid",
"stellar",
"sterling",
"superb",
"superior",
"superlative",
"supernal",
"swell",
"terrific",
"tip-top",
"top",
"top-notch",
"unsurpassed",
"wonderful",
"better",
"exceptional",
"fancy",
"high-grade",
"special",
"sufficient",
"average",
"borderline",
"fair",
"mediocre",
"middling",
"minimal",
"so-so",
"unexceptional",
"suitable",
"useful",
"worthy",
"gratifying",
"satisfying"
],
"related":[
"abysmal",
"atrocious",
"awful",
"bitchin'",
"brutal",
"damnable",
"deplorable",
"detestable",
"disastrous",
"dreadful",
"execrable",
"gnarly",
"horrendous",
"horrible",
"pathetic",
"stinky",
"sucky",
"terrible",
"unspeakable",
"defective",
"faulty",
"flawed",
"egregious",
"flagrant",
"gross",
"bum",
"cheesy",
"coarse",
"common",
"crappy",
"cut-rate",
"junky",
"lesser",
"low-grade",
"low-rent",
"mediocre",
"miserable",
"reprehensible",
"rotten",
"rubbishy",
"second-rate",
"shoddy",
"sleazy",
"trashy",
"abominable",
"odious",
"vile",
"useless",
"valueless",
"worthless",
"inadequate",
"insufficient",
"lacking",
"meager",
"meagre",
"mean",
"miserly",
"niggardly",
"scanty",
"shabby",
"short",
"skimp",
"skimpy",
"spare",
"stingy",
"miscreant",
"scurrilous",
"villainous",
"counterfeit",
"fake",
"phony",
"phoney",
"sham"
],
"synonyms":[
"bad",
"bastard",
"bush",
"bush-league",
"crummy",
"crumby",
"deficient",
"dissatisfactory",
"ill",
"inferior",
"lame",
"lousy",
"off",
"paltry",
"poor",
"punk",
"sour",
"suboptimal",
"subpar",
"substandard",
"unacceptable",
"unsatisfactory",
"wack",
"wanting",
"wretched"
]
},
"having an opinion that does not agree with truth or the facts":{
"antonyms":[
"correct",
"right"
],
"examples":[
"I'm sorry, but the latest research proves you wrong"
],
"near antonyms":[
"informed",
"accurate",
"exact",
"precise",
"true"
],
"related":[
"confused",
"misguided",
"misinformed",
"misled",
"erroneous",
"false",
"inaccurate",
"inexact",
"untrue",
"deceived",
"deluded",
"duped",
"tricked"
],
"synonyms":[
"incorrect",
"mistaken"
]
},
"not appropriate for a particular occasion or situation":{
"antonyms":[
"appropriate",
"becoming",
"befitting",
"correct",
"decorous",
"felicitous",
"fit",
"fitting",
"genteel",
"happy",
"meet",
"proper",
"right",
"seemly",
"suitable"
],
"examples":[
"has a knack for saying just the wrong thing"
],
"near antonyms":[
"fortunate",
"opportune",
"seasonable",
"timely",
"applicable",
"apposite",
"apropos",
"apt",
"germane",
"material",
"pat",
"pointed",
"relative",
"relevant",
"compatible",
"congenial",
"harmonious",
"allowed",
"authorized",
"permitted",
"approved",
"endorsed",
"indorsed",
"kosher",
"licensed",
"sanctioned",
"abetted",
"encouraged",
"promoted",
"supported",
"acceptable",
"adequate",
"all right",
"decent",
"fine",
"OK",
"okay",
"passable",
"respectable",
"satisfactory",
"tolerable",
"commendable",
"creditable",
"exemplary",
"blameless",
"irreproachable",
"balanced",
"companionate",
"congruous",
"consonant",
"harmonious"
],
"related":[
"inopportune",
"unfortunate",
"unseasonable",
"untimely",
"extraneous",
"immaterial",
"inapplicable",
"irrelative",
"irrelevant",
"misbecoming",
"mismatched",
"incompatible",
"inconsistent",
"uncongenial",
"bad",
"naughty",
"sinful",
"blamable",
"blameworthy",
"censurable",
"banned",
"barred",
"disallowed",
"forbidden",
"interdicted",
"outlawed",
"prohibited",
"proscribed",
"awkward",
"gauche",
"ungraceful",
"unacceptable",
"unsatisfactory"
],
"synonyms":[
"amiss",
"graceless",
"improper",
"inapposite",
"inappropriate",
"inapt",
"incongruous",
"incorrect",
"indecorous",
"inept",
"infelicitous",
"malapropos",
"perverse",
"unapt",
"unbecoming",
"unfit",
"unhappy",
"unseemly",
"unsuitable",
"untoward"
]
},
"not being in agreement with what is true":{
"antonyms":[
"accurate",
"correct",
"errorless",
"exact",
"factual",
"precise",
"proper",
"right",
"sound",
"true",
"valid",
"veracious"
],
"examples":[
"her answer that Thomas Jefferson was the second president of the United States is wrong \u2014it was John Adams, of course"
],
"near antonyms":[
"confirmed",
"demonstrated",
"established",
"proven",
"tested",
"faultless",
"flawless",
"impeccable",
"letter-perfect",
"perfect"
],
"related":[
"counterfactual",
"specious",
"spurious",
"deceptive",
"delusive",
"delusory",
"distorted",
"fallacious",
"fictitious",
"illusory",
"misleading",
"amiss",
"askew",
"awry",
"deceitful",
"dishonest",
"fraudulent",
"lying",
"mendacious",
"unconfirmed",
"unproven",
"untested",
"fabricated",
"invented",
"made-up",
"trumped-up"
],
"synonyms":[
"erroneous",
"false",
"inaccurate",
"incorrect",
"inexact",
"invalid",
"off",
"unsound",
"untrue",
"untruthful"
]
},
"not conforming to a high moral standard; morally unacceptable":{
"antonyms":[
"decent",
"ethical",
"good",
"honest",
"honorable",
"just",
"moral",
"right",
"righteous",
"sublime",
"upright",
"virtuous"
],
"examples":[
"was caught doing something wrong"
],
"near antonyms":[
"elevated",
"high",
"high-minded",
"law-abiding",
"legitimate",
"lofty",
"noble",
"principled",
"reputable",
"scrupulous",
"allowed",
"authorized",
"legal",
"licensed",
"permissible",
"permitted",
"approved",
"endorsed",
"indorsed",
"sanctioned",
"abetted",
"encouraged",
"promoted",
"supported",
"clean",
"correct",
"decent",
"decorous",
"exemplary",
"proper",
"seemly",
"blameless",
"commendable",
"creditable",
"guiltless",
"legitimate",
"chaste",
"immaculate",
"incorruptible",
"innocent",
"inoffensive",
"irreproachable",
"lily-white",
"perfect",
"pure",
"spotless",
"squeaky-clean",
"uncorrupted",
"unerring",
"unfallen",
"unobjectionable",
"venerable",
"white",
"wholesome",
"esteemed",
"respected",
"upstanding",
"worthy"
],
"related":[
"base",
"contemptible",
"despicable",
"dirty",
"disreputable",
"evil-minded",
"ignoble",
"ill",
"infernal",
"low",
"mean",
"snide",
"sordid",
"atrocious",
"cruel",
"infamous",
"nasty",
"blamable",
"blameworthy",
"censurable",
"objectionable",
"obscene",
"offensive",
"reprehensible",
"corrupt",
"debased",
"debauched",
"degenerate",
"depraved",
"dissolute",
"libertine",
"loose",
"low-minded",
"perverted",
"reprobate",
"scrofulous",
"sick",
"unhealthy",
"cursed",
"curst",
"cussed",
"defiling",
"noxious",
"pernicious",
"pestilential",
"ugly",
"ungodly",
"unwholesome",
"banned",
"barred",
"condemned",
"discouraged",
"forbidden",
"illegal",
"interdicted",
"outlawed",
"prohibited",
"proscribed",
"unauthorized",
"unclean",
"disallowed",
"execrable",
"lousy",
"miserable",
"wretched",
"errant",
"erring",
"fallen",
"unprincipled",
"unscrupulous",
"improper",
"incorrect",
"indecent",
"indecorous",
"naughty",
"unbecoming",
"unseemly",
"vulgar",
"dishonest",
"dishonorable"
],
"synonyms":[
"bad",
"dark",
"evil",
"immoral",
"iniquitous",
"nefarious",
"rotten",
"sinful",
"unethical",
"unlawful",
"unrighteous",
"unsavory",
"vicious",
"vile",
"villainous",
"wicked"
]
},
"off the desired or intended path or course":{
"antonyms":[
"aright",
"right",
"well"
],
"examples":[
"all of our carefully laid plans have gone wrong"
],
"near antonyms":[
"perfectly",
"auspiciously",
"favorably",
"promisingly",
"correctly",
"properly",
"rightly",
"appropriately",
"fittingly",
"suitably"
],
"related":[
"badly",
"faultily",
"improperly",
"inappropriately",
"incorrectly",
"mistakenly",
"wrongly",
"inadequately",
"insufficiently",
"unpromisingly"
],
"synonyms":[
"afield",
"amiss",
"astray",
"awry"
]
},
"that which is morally unacceptable":{
"antonyms":[
"good",
"morality",
"right",
"virtue"
],
"examples":[
"any reasonable person should be expected to know the difference between right and wrong"
],
"near antonyms":[
"decency",
"goodness",
"honesty",
"integrity",
"probity",
"rectitude",
"uprightness",
"goodness",
"righteousness",
"virtuousness"
],
"related":[
"atrociousness",
"atrocity",
"badness",
"balefulness",
"darkness",
"depravedness",
"devilishness",
"diabolism",
"enormity",
"evilness",
"heinousness",
"iniquitousness",
"satanism",
"sinfulness",
"vileness",
"wickedness",
"devilry",
"deviltry",
"fiendishness",
"cancer",
"canker",
"decay",
"rot",
"squalor",
"corruption",
"debauchery",
"degeneracy",
"depravity",
"indecency",
"malefaction",
"perversion",
"pervertedness",
"scurrility",
"scurrilousness",
"abomination",
"anathema",
"taboo",
"tabu"
],
"synonyms":[
"bad",
"evil",
"evildoing",
"ill",
"immorality",
"iniquity",
"sin",
"villainy"
]
},
"type":[
"adjective",
"adverb",
"noun",
"verb"
],
"unfair or inadequate treatment of someone or something or an instance of this":{
"antonyms":[
"equitableness",
"equity",
"fairness",
"justice"
],
"examples":[
"trying to right all the wrongs in the world"
],
"near antonyms":[
"cricket"
],
"related":[
"affront",
"indignity",
"insult",
"offense",
"offence",
"outrage",
"put-down",
"slight",
"slur",
"beef",
"complaint",
"grievance"
],
"synonyms":[
"disservice",
"inequity",
"injury",
"injustice",
"raw deal",
"shaft",
"unfairness",
"unjustness"
]
}
},
"wrought (up)":{
"as in worried , anxious":{
"antonyms":[],
"examples":[],
"near antonyms":[],
"related":[],
"synonyms":[]
},
"type":[
"adjective"
]
},
"wrongness":{
"the quality or state of being unsuitable or unfitting":{
"examples":[
"arguments about the rightness or wrongness of the satirical skit drowned out any discussion of the points it attempted to raise"
],
"synonyms":[
"improperness",
"impropriety",
"inappositeness",
"inappropriateness",
"inaptness",
"incorrectness",
"infelicity",
"unfitness"
],
"related":[
"extraneousness",
"inadequacy",
"inadequateness",
"inadmissibility",
"inapplicability",
"irrelevance",
"meaninglessness",
"pointlessness",
"senselessness",
"inauspiciousness",
"inexpedience",
"inexpediency",
"intolerability",
"undesirability",
"undesirableness",
"unsatisfactoriness",
"uselessness",
"unbecomingness"
],
"near antonyms":[
"admissibility",
"applicability",
"bearing",
"connection",
"materiality",
"pertinence",
"pointedness",
"relevance",
"relevancy"
],
"antonyms":[
"appositeness",
"appropriateness",
"aptness",
"correctness",
"felicitousness",
"felicity",
"fitness",
"fittingness",
"properness",
"propriety",
"rightness",
"seemliness",
"suitability",
"suitableness"
]
},
"type":[
"noun"
]
}
}