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1 wrongly
wrongly ['rɒŋlɪ](a) (unjustly) à tort, injustement;∎ to be wrongly accused être accusé à tort ou injustement accusé(b) (incorrectly) à tort, mal;∎ to be wrongly informed être mal renseigné;∎ this word is spelt wrongly ce mot est mal écrit ou mal orthographié;∎ I guessed wrongly je suis tombé à côté, je me suis trompé;∎ the cat was wrongly described as a Siamese le chat a été décrit à tort comme un siamois(c) (by mistake) par erreur, à tort;∎ he was wrongly assigned to the night shift il a été affecté par erreur ou à tort à l'équipe de nuit -
2 wrongly
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3 wrongly
wrongly, US [transcription]["rO ;N-"] adv [word, position, translate, connect] mal ; he concluded, wrongly, that… il a conclu, à tort, que… ; rightly or wrongly à tort ou à raison. -
4 wrongly
1) (incorrectly: The letter was wrongly addressed.) mal2) (unjustly: I have been wrongly treated.) injustement -
5 wrongly placed, to be
(on assessment roll)faire l'objet d'une inscription erronée -
6 rightly
rightly [ˈraɪtlɪ]a. ( = correctly) avec raison• he rightly assumed that... il supposait avec raison que...b. ( = justifiably) à juste titre* * *['raɪtlɪ]1) ( accurately) correctement2) ( justifiably) à juste titre3) ( with certainty) au juste -
7 address
address [əˈdres]1. nouna. adresse fb. ( = speech) discours ma. ( = put address on) mettre l'adresse sur ; ( = direct) [+ speech, writing, complaints] adresser (to à)b. ( = speak to) s'adresser à3. compounds━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━✎ The French word adresse has only one d, and ends in -e.* * *[ə'dres], US ['ædres] 1.1) ( place of residence) adresse f2) ( speech) discours m (to à)3) ( as etiquette)2.form of address (for somebody) — formule f pour s'adresser à quelqu'un
transitive verb1) mettre l'adresse sur [parcel, letter]2) ( speak to) s'adresser à [group]3) ( aim) adresser [remark, complaint] (to à)4) ( tackle) aborder [question]; s'occuper de [problem] -
8 construe
construe [kənˈstru:]* * *[kən'struː]transitive verb interpréter ( as something comme quelque chose) -
9 falsely
falsely [ˈfɔ:lslɪ][claim, declare, report] faussement ; [accuse, convict] à tort* * *['fɔːlslɪ]1) ( wrongly) faussement; ( mistakenly) à tort2) [smile, laugh] avec affectation -
10 imagine
imagine [ɪˈmædʒɪn]a. ( = picture to o.s.) (s')imaginer• (just) imagine! tu (t')imagines !• (you can) imagine how I felt! vous imaginez ce que j'ai pu ressentir !• I can imagine! je m'en doute !• (you can) imagine how pleased I was! vous pensez si j'étais content !• you won't want to stay long, I imagine vous ne resterez pas longtemps, j'imagine• was he meeting someone? -- I imagine so il avait un rendez-vous ? -- j'imaginec. ( = believe wrongly) croire* * *[ɪ'mædʒɪn]transitive verb1) ( visualize) (s')imaginer [object, scene]to imagine being rich/king — s'imaginer riche/roi
just imagine! —
I can't imagine her liking that —
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11 misdirect
misdirect [ˈmɪsdɪˈrekt]* * *[ˌmɪsdaɪ'rekt, -dɪ'rekt]transitive verb1) mal orienter2) ( address wrongly) mal libeller l'adresse de [letter, parcel] -
12 misread
misread [ˈmɪsˈri:d](preterite, past participle misread) [ˈmɪsˈred]a. ( = misinterpret) mal interpréterb. [+ word] mal lire* * *[ˌmɪs'riːd]transitive verb (prét, pp - read [-'red])1) ( read wrongly) mal lire [sentence, map]; mal relever [meter]2) ( misinterpret) mal interpréter [actions] -
13 abuse
1. [ə'bju:z] verb1) (to use wrongly, usually with harmful results: She abused her privileges by taking too long a holiday.) abuser de2) (to insult or speak roughly to: She abused the servants.) injurier2. [ə'bju:s] noun1) (insulting language: He shouted abuse at her.) injure2) (the wrong use of something: This toy has been subjected to a lot of abuse.) usage abusif•- abusive- abusively - abusiveness -
14 assess
[ə'ses]1) (to estimate or judge the quality or quantity of: Can you assess my chances of winning?) évaluer2) (to estimate in order to calculate tax due on: My income has been assessed wrongly.) évaluer•- assessor -
15 join
[‹oin] 1. verb1) ((often with up, on etc) to put together or connect: The electrician joined the wires (up) wrongly; You must join this piece (on) to that piece; He joined the two stories together to make a play; The island is joined to the mainland by a sandbank at low tide.) joindre, raccorder2) (to connect (two points) eg by a line, as in geometry: Join point A to point B.) relier3) (to become a member of (a group): Join our club!) devenir membre de4) ((sometimes with up) to meet and come together (with): This lane joins the main road; Do you know where the two rivers join?; They joined up with us for the remainder of the holiday.) (se) rejoindre, (se) joindre (à)5) (to come into the company of: I'll join you later in the restaurant.) rejoindre2. noun(a place where two things are joined: You can hardly see the joins in the material.) joint- join hands - join in - join up -
16 miscalculate
[mis'kælkjuleit](to calculate or estimate wrongly: I miscalculated the bill.) mal calculer -
17 misconstrue
[,miskən'stru:]((formal) to misunderstand; to interpret wrongly: That's not what she meant, her statement was misconstrued.) -
18 misdirect
(to direct wrongly: She was misdirected, and ended up in the wrong street.) mal renseigner -
19 mispronounce
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20 misspell
[mis'spel]past tense, past participles - misspelt,misspelled; verb(to spell wrongly.) mal orthographier
См. также в других словарях:
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. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
wrongly — adverb 1 incorrectly or in a way that is not based on facts: You re holding the racket wrongly. | Matthew was wrongly diagnosed as having a brain tumour. 2 in a way that is unfair or immoral: wrongly convicted/imprisoned/accused/blamed: Human… … Longman dictionary of contemporary English
wrongly — wrong|ly [ˈrɔŋli US ˈro:ŋ ] adv 1.) not correctly or in a way that is not based on facts ≠ ↑rightly ▪ Matthew was wrongly diagnosed as having a brain tumour. ▪ His name had been wrongly spelt. 2.) in a way that is unfair or immoral ≠ ↑rightly ▪… … Dictionary of contemporary English
wrongly — wrong|ly [ rɔŋli ] adverb * not correctly, or by mistake: The two women were wrongly accused of murder. I filled in the form wrongly … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
wrongly */ — UK [ˈrɒŋlɪ] / US [ˈrɔŋlɪ] adverb not correctly, or by mistake The two women were wrongly accused of murder. I filled in the form wrongly … English dictionary
wrongly — adverb /ˈrɒŋli,ˈrɔːŋli/ a) In an unfair or immoral manner; unjustly. I wrongly assumed that it would be an easy job. b) Incorrectly; by error. Syn: incorrectly, mistakenly … Wiktionary
wrongly — See wrong, wrongly … Dictionary of problem words and expressions
wrongly — adv. Wrongly is used with these verbs: ↑accuse, ↑act, ↑advise, ↑attribute, ↑believe, ↑claim, ↑convict, ↑diagnose, ↑execute, ↑identify, ↑imply, ↑imprison … Collocations dictionary
wrongly — wrong ► ADJECTIVE 1) not correct or true; mistaken or in error. 2) unjust, dishonest, or immoral. 3) in a bad or abnormal condition; amiss. ► ADVERB 1) in a mistaken or undesirable manner or direction. 2) with an incorrect result. ► … English terms dictionary
wrongly — adverb 1. without justice or fairness (Freq. 1) wouldst not play false and yet would wrongly win Shakespeare • Derived from adjective: ↑wrong 2. in an inaccurate manner (Freq. 1) he decided to reveal the details only after other sources had… … Useful english dictionary
wrongly advised — index misadvised Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary