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10 Sentences With "did wrong to"

How to use did wrong to in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "did wrong to" and check conjugation/comparative form for "did wrong to". Mastering all the usages of "did wrong to" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Here are a few things the campaign did wrong, to put it mildly: First, a necessary caveat: No one factor explains Clinton's Electoral College loss.
She's checking her phone constantly, fixating over all of the things she did wrong to drive him away, and having dreams about losing her teeth. Seriously.
When women are violated in one of the most horrific ways possible, their first reaction is to blame themselves, to wonder what they did wrong, to wonder what they could have done differently.
"I am willing, for my impulsive act and things I did wrong, to surrender myself to Taiwan to face sentencing," he said, adding he had made the "worst mistake" that could not be reversed.
"I am willing, for my impulsive actions and things I did wrong, to surrender myself, to return to Taiwan to face sentencing and stand trial," Chan told reporters outside prison before being whisked away in a van to an exclusive gated community beyond the reach of the media.
In Hyndluljóð, Járnsaxa is named as one of the Nine Mothers of Heimdallr. In Skáldskaparmál, Thor's wife the goddess Sif is either herself called "Járnsaxa" or called by a kenning meaning "the rival of Járnsaxa", throwing confusion on whether Sif is or is not distinct from Járnsaxa the mother of Magni. At the end of the story, Odin argues that Thor did wrong to offer the splendid horse Gullfaxi to Magni, the son of a giantess, rather than to himself, the father of Thor.
Gullfaxi Gullfaxi is a horse in Norse mythology. Its name means Golden mane. It was originally owned by Hrungnir, and was later given to Magni by Thor as a reward for lifting off the leg of Hrungnir, which lay over the unconscious Thor and strangled him: :'And I will give thee,' he said, 'the horse Gold- Mane, which Hrungnir possessed.' :Then Odin spake and said that Thor did wrong to give the good horse to the son of a giantess, and not to his father.
Smith-Dorrien's decision to stand and fight enraged French, who accused him of jeopardising the whole BEF. French and his staff believed that II Corps had been destroyed at Le Cateau, although its units reappeared and reassembled after the retreat. Haig, despite believing French to be incompetent, wrote in his journal (4 September 1914) of Smith-Dorrien's "ill-considered decision" in electing to stand and fight at Le Cateau. Murray later (in 1933) called Smith-Dorrien "a straight honourable gentleman, most lovable, kind and generous" but thought he "did wrong to fight other than a strong rearguard action".
One day, Bartholomew is in the park, sitting and minding his own business by watching a butterfly flying around, when a toddler rides by on a scooter and, without looking where he's going, runs over Bartholomew's tail by accident, making him yelp in pain. After Bartholomew blows on his sore tail, he spies the scooter's wheels and, seeing that the wheels did this to his tail, gets mad enough to shake all over. With that, Bartholomew catches up to the toddler and punishes him for running over his tail by biting and ripping off his scooter's wheels, which makes the toddler start crying, as he doesn't know what he did wrong to deserve it. Bartholomew then digs a hole to bury the wheels, but as he takes the scooter wheels over to the hole, another child's toy train races harmlessly past.
Then Magni came up, son of Thor and Járnsaxa: he was then three nights old; he cast the foot of Hrungnir off Thor, and spake: 'See how ill it is, father, that I came so late: I had struck this giant dead with my fist, methinks, if I had met with him.' Thor arose and welcomed his son, saying that he should surely become great; 'And I will give thee, he said, the horse Gold-Mane, which Hrungnir possessed.' Then Odin spake and said that Thor did wrong to give the good horse to the son of a giantess, and not to his father. : ::—Skáldskaparmál (17), Brodeur's translation John Lindow draws a parallel between Magni and Odin's son Váli for they both have a giantess mother (Rindr for Váli) and achieve a feat at a very young age (Váli is only one day old when he kills Höðr, thus avenging Baldr's death).

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