113 adverbs to describe how to wrong

" Many a time afterward these angry mutineers heard that sonorous, clear, boyish treble in stern and determined command; but they never heard it signalize a more heroic temper than at that moment, when, himself deeply wronged, he forced them to go back in the ranks to receive the interloper.

France itself has demonstrated that those who say you can make Germany so feeble that she will never be able to hit back are utterly wrong.

Hardly any act is conceivable which has not been thought by some man, somewhere, somehow, morally right or morally wrong.

I have to teach you, in justice to a much-injured man, that we have, in our hearts, cruelly wronged that excellent and devout Mr. BUMSTEAD, by suspecting him of a crime whereof he is now proved innocent at least I suspected him.

There were eighty pages of Preface, and not till that morning had he discovered that in the very first page of said Preface he had set out with a principle of criticism fundamentally wrong, which vitiated all his following reasoning.

Mr. Steele had not been long in Barbadoes, before he saw enough to convince him that there was something radically wrong in the management of the slaves there, and he was anxious to try, as well for the sake of humanity as of his own interest, to effect a change in it.

It was a kind of setting right, so far as could be, of the balance which had got so terribly wrong.

Either we fancy we can hasten it by some exertion of our own from without, and are thus led into hurry and anxiety, not to say sometimes into the employment, of grievously wrong methods; or else we give up all hope and so deny the germinating power of the seed we have planted.

"These peers of Rome have mark'd A rash revenging hammer in thy brain;" which seemed so decidedly wrong as to warrant the change that, without much violence, has been made.

Their work was of the most strenuous nature and was carried out with the greatest devotion, but the system was manifestly wrong in principle.

"It is wrongall horribly wrong.

But you could see by the way he walked now that there was something quite dreadfully wrong.

Deem that thou art foully wronged, whose graces have such power to bless, If any of thy subject slaves to thee, their queen, should offer less, And accept this pledged assurance, that oblivion cannot roll O'er the image of thy beauty stamped on this enamored soul.

"Pal," he said, "you're dead wrong.

It had just dawned on his consciousness that he had been blundering frightfully, and his mind stood still for a moment, as a man halts suddenly, when he finds himself in a totally wrong road.

He died long before his doubly-wronged, unhappy wife, Eleanora, on the 27th February 1620.

The experience of history is that nations do not take the obviously right course, but the obviously wrong one.

All I heard and what little I saw made me believe they are suffering from bad leadership and ignorance more than from anything hopelessly wrong.

" And rising Dick Carson who was no longer Dick Carson but John Massey held out his hand to the man who had wronged him so bitterly.

On the contrary, I would bid him submit to the determination of society, because a man is bound to submit to the inconveniences of it, as he enjoys the good: but the young man, though politically wrong, would not be morally wrong.

If not a woman of genius, she had extraordinary good sense, and her advice was seldom wrong.

This I believe to be absolutely and fatally wrong.

Mr. Spragg did not regard divorce as intrinsically wrong or even inexpedient; and of its social disadvantages he had never even heard.

"Oh, I have been wronged most fearfully," she whispered between her sobs.

Three days of reflection, while it had not cooled the anger he felt toward these members of the mob that had so brutally wronged his people, had slightly cooled his ardour for aggressive warfare.

113 adverbs to describe how to  wrong  - Adverbs for  wrong