All right antonyms
right
R r adj right
- groundless β without rational basis: groundless fears.
- in the wrong β not in accordance with what is morally right or good: a wrong deed.
- amiss β If you say that something is amiss, you mean there is something wrong.
- demeritorious β a mark against a person for misconduct or deficiency: If you receive four demerits during a term, you will be expelled from school.
- misunderstood β improperly understood or interpreted.
- convictable β to prove or declare guilty of an offense, especially after a legal trial: to convict a prisoner of a felony.
- heart-rending β causing or expressing intense grief, anguish, or distress.
- larboard β (formerly) port2 (def 1).
- buyable β available to be bought
- culpable β If someone or their conduct is culpable, they are responsible for something wrong or bad that has happened.
- amoral β If you describe someone as amoral, you do not like the way they behave because they do not seem to care whether what they do is right or wrong.
- cruddy β dirty or unpleasant
- impeachable β making one subject to impeachment, as misconduct in office.
- misguided β misled; mistaken: Their naive actions were a misguided attempt to help the poor.
noun right
- impiety β lack of piety; lack of reverence for God or sacred things; irreverence.
- abomination β If you say that something is an abomination, you think that it is completely unacceptable.
- impingement β to make an impression; have an effect or impact (usually followed by on or upon): to impinge upon the imagination; social pressures that impinge upon one's daily life.
- gaff β harsh treatment or criticism: All the gaff he took never made him bitter.
- booboos β a stupid or silly mistake; blunder.
- flack β antiaircraft fire, especially as experienced by the crews of combat airplanes at which the fire is directed.
- idolism β idolatry.
- looseness β free or released from fastening or attachment: a loose end.
- badness β not good in any manner or degree.
- eidolon β An idealized person or thing.
- entrenchment β The process of entrenching or something which entrenches.
- ingenuousness β free from reserve, restraint, or dissimulation; candid; sincere.
- gluttony β excessive eating and drinking.
- grievance β a wrong considered as grounds for complaint, or something believed to cause distress: Inequitable taxation is the chief grievance.
- misconstrual β A misinterpretation of the meaning of something.
- wrongness β not in accordance with what is morally right or good: a wrong deed.
- indiscreetness β Indiscretion.
- lapse β an accidental or temporary decline or deviation from an expected or accepted condition or state; a temporary falling or slipping from a previous standard: a lapse of justice.
- lubricity β oily smoothness, as of a surface; slipperiness.
- in-accuracy β something inaccurate; error.
- mutilation β to injure, disfigure, or make imperfect by removing or irreparably damaging parts: Vandals mutilated the painting.
- atrocity β An atrocity is a very cruel, shocking action.
- faultiness β having faults or defects; imperfect.
- waywardness β The quality of being wayward.
- crudeness β in a raw or unprepared state; unrefined or natural: crude sugar.
- delict β a wrongful act for which the person injured has the right to a civil remedy
- misimpression β a faulty or incorrect impression; a misconception or misapprehension.
- malefaction β an evil deed; crime; wrongdoing.
verb right
adjective right
- wrongful β unjust or unfair: a wrongful act; a wrongful charge.
- highhanded β Alternative spelling of high-handed.
- fluffed β Simple past tense and past participle of fluff.
- criminal β A criminal is a person who regularly commits crimes.