adj
Wrongly used; perverted; misapplied; unjust; illegal.
n
(obsolete) deprivation; loss
n
The attribution of dangerous characteristics to something not particularly dangerous.
n
(obsolete) An act of dishonouring or disgracing.
adj
(dialect) Dysfunctional; broken
n
Loss; detriment; hindrance.
v
(American spelling) Alternative form of disfavour [(British spelling) To show lack of favour or antipathy towards.]
n
An unkindness; a disobliging act.
n
(Internet) An individual vote showing disapproval of, or lack of support for, something posted on the Internet.
n
(law) The criminal offence of misbehaving in a public place, for example by being drunk or loitering.
adj
Fit to be disparaged; unworthy.
n
(obsolete) dislike; dissatisfaction; discontent
n
(archaic) Loss or lack of reputation or good name; dishonour; disrepute.
n
Loss or want of reputation; ill character.
adj
(obsolete) Showing a lack of respect; disrespectful.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To treat irreverently or with disrespect.
v
To fail to satisfy; to displease.
adj
Obsolete form of dissentious. [Marked by dissensions; contentious]
n
Service that results in harm; an (intentionally or unintentionally) unhelpful, harmful action.
n
A disadvantageous aspect of something that is normally advantageous.
adv
(rare, nonstandard) In a falseful manner: falsely.
adj
Full of faults or sins.
v
To behave in a rude, ill-mannered way.
n
(law) The state of contract that allows a party to back away from its contractual obligations due to (unforeseen) radical changes to the nature of the thing a party has been obligated to.
n
(rare, humorous) Failure to maintain infrastructure.
n
A poor or damaged reputation.
adv
Ellipsis of in flagrante delicto. [In the act of committing a misdeed.]
n
Improper or unethical conduct by a professional or official person.
n
Malpractice by a medical practitioner.
n
(informal) Synonym of misery lit
n
Obsolete spelling of mischief [(uncountable) Conduct that playfully causes petty annoyance.]
n
(obsolete) The quality of being miscreant; adherence to a false religion; false faith.
adj
Obsolete form of miscreant. [Lacking in conscience or moral principles; unscrupulous.]
v
Alternative form of misfavor [To dislike or disapprove of; to view with displeasure or dislike.]
n
The state of being ruled badly; disorder, lawlessness, anarchy.
n
A sin or moral transgression.
n
Desertion of one's principles.
v
(intransitive, obsolete, used with "at") To be averse to.
n
Liability to punishment; conflict with authority.
v
(transitive) To deprive of worship or due honour; to dishonour.
adj
Alternative spelling of wrongdoing
n
(countable) An instance of doing wrong.
n
An act or instance of wrong or wrongdoing; wrongness; error.
adj
Marked by wrong or wrong-doing; characteristically wrong in essence or manner.
Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook
feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters
based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some
of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the
clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe
every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be
missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their
names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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