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    Wrong·ly
    /ˈrôNGlē/

    adverb

    • 1. in a way that is incorrect or mistaken: "my name is spelled wrongly"
    • 2. in an unjust, dishonest, or immoral way: "one who admitted acting wrongly was subsequently fired"
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  3. 3 days ago · in an unjust or unfair manner.

  4. 13 hours ago · A sample activity in JeffCo’s in-development curriculum highlights “civil disobedience by Native Americans,” emphasizing the 19-month occupation of Alcatraz by Pan-Indian activists from 1969 ...

  5. 1 day ago · Practically, the insurance neutrality doctrine is too limited in its scope. It zooms in on the insurer’s prepetition obligations and policy rights. That wrongly ignores all the other ways in which bankruptcy proceedings and reorganization plans can alter and impose obligations on insurers. See supra, at 11–12.

  6. 3 days ago · The amount of communication that is non-verbal is between 60 and 90%,5 according to Blake Eastman. He goes on to conclude, “The important part is that most communication is nonverbal. In fact, nonverbal behavior is the most crucial aspect of communication.”6. If that is the case, the way that we communicate nonverbally is paramount to good ...

  7. 3 days ago · Gates and Brown capture so much in those definitions. One can easily envision the micro-manager wrongly imposing themselves on a subordinate, juxtaposed with a second image of two people engaged in respectful dialogue about what needs to be done and how it will be accomplished.

  8. You'd probably need to define perfect but intuitively a perfect creation, when given the choice to sin or not sin, would will to not sin of its own accord. Saying "they were perfect but chose wrongly" feels like a contradiction and "they did it because they had free will" a handwave of sorts.

  9. 4 days ago · CARBONDALE, Ill. – Seven long years in a Philippines jail – accused of a crime he didn’t commit, which the court there would eventually clear him of – taught Southern Illinois University Carbondale researcher Raymund Narag that in some justice systems the process itself is the punishment.

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