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All get right antonyms

get right
G g

verb get right

  • destroy — To destroy something means to cause so much damage to it that it is completely ruined or does not exist any more.
  • put off — to move or place (anything) so as to get it into or out of a specific location or position: to put a book on the shelf.
  • hesitate — to be reluctant or wait to act because of fear, indecision, or disinclination: She hesitated to take the job.
  • unsettle — to alter from a settled state; cause to be no longer firmly fixed or established; render unstable; disturb: Violence unsettled the government.
  • complicate — To complicate something means to make it more difficult to understand or deal with.
  • obscure — (of meaning) not clear or plain; ambiguous, vague, or uncertain: an obscure sentence in the contract.
  • misunderstand — to take (words, statements, etc.) in a wrong sense; understand wrongly.
  • tangle — to bring together into a mass of confusedly interlaced or intertwisted threads, strands, or other like parts; snarl.
  • mend — to make (something broken, worn, torn, or otherwise damaged) whole, sound, or usable by repairing: to mend old clothes; to mend a broken toy.
  • hide — Informal. to administer a beating to; thrash.
  • search — to go or look through (a place, area, etc.) carefully in order to find something missing or lost: They searched the woods for the missing child. I searched the desk for the letter.
  • defer — If you defer an event or action, you arrange for it to happen at a later date, rather than immediately or at the previously planned time.
  • miss — to fail to hit or strike: to miss a target.
  • neglect — to pay no attention or too little attention to; disregard or slight: The public neglected his genius for many years.
  • confuse — If you confuse two things, you get them mixed up, so that you think one of them is the other one.
  • lose — to come to be without (something in one's possession or care), through accident, theft, etc., so that there is little or no prospect of recovery: I'm sure I've merely misplaced my hat, not lost it.
  • twist — to combine, as two or more strands or threads, by winding together; intertwine.
  • fail — to fall short of success or achievement in something expected, attempted, desired, or approved: The experiment failed because of poor planning.
  • agree — If people agree with each other about something, they have the same opinion about it or say that they have the same opinion.
  • pose — a movement in which the dancer steps, in any desired position, from one foot to the other with a straight knee onto the flat foot, demi-pointe, or pointe.
  • question — a sentence in an interrogative form, addressed to someone in order to get information in reply.
  • wonder — to think or speculate curiously: to wonder about the origin of the solar system.
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