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Wrong definition

Wrong means an act or omission that—
Wrong means a tort, breach of contract or breach of trust, whether the act is committed by the person to whom the wrong is attributed or by one for whose acts he is responsible, and whether or not the act is also a crime, and whether or not the wrong is intentional;
Wrong here means legally or factually incorrect because the proposed product does not fall within the scope of the patent claims; because the patent claims off-label uses; because the patent is invalid; because the patent will have expired by the time of marketing; etc.

Examples of Wrong in a sentence

  • Without limiting the rights and remedies of the other Creditors, to the extent the Wrong Payments have been received and applied by the Receiving Creditor making the turnover of the same impossible, the Receiving Creditor agrees that such Wrong Payments shall be netted against future payments to which it is entitled under the relevant Financing Documents.

  • Assumptions about Reserves, Pricing and Costs Used in the Merger Values May Be Wrong.

  • Wrong surgeries include, but are not limited to, surgery performed on the wrong body part, surgery performed on the wrong person, objects left in patients after surgery, etc.

  • Wrong perception towards indigenous vegetables influenced their production and consumption.

  • Wrong reporting of credit information to Credit Information Bureau vi.


More Definitions of Wrong

Wrong. Herb on TheStreet" "Tech Savvy" "The Invisible Mouth" "Technician's Take" "Wing Tips" "Xxx Xxxxxxx" "Xxxx Xxxxxxxx" "Xxxx Xxxxxxx" "The Chartist" "Building Blocks" "Eye to the Keyhole" "Power Lines" "Noglows on the Net" "MonEmailbag" "Investors' Bookshelf" "Drinks & Diversions" "Fundamental Questions"
Wrong means an act or omission (whether or not an offence) –
Wrong means the person knows the act is morally wrong, not just legally wrong (Abbey was overturned). The question is whether the accused was UNABLE because of a disease of the mind, to understand that he ought not to have committed the act and that the act was morally wrong in the circumstances
Wrong means D didn’t know his acts were either legally or morally wrong…moral wrong is judged by society’s morals, not D’s own beliefs
Wrong means ‘forbidden by God’.
Wrong in this case means wrong not with respect to “objective” reality but rather simply ineffective for successful action. As I will suggest, stimuli that seem
Wrong means according to law – A knew what he was doing was forbidden by law