Englishfor English speakers
sorry
Adjective
—
You say "I'm sorry" when you have done something wrong and you feel bad.
I'm sorry that I lost your jacket last night.
but
Coordinator
—
You use but to join two ideas and show that they are not the same.
I would take you there, but I do not have my car.
The changes were small but important.
"Do you speak French?" "No, but I speak Spanish."
It says this not in words but in pictures.
—
You use but to change the topic.
I understand. And I'm sorry. But there is nothing I can do about it now.
And that's important, but another thing that has changed is the location.
but
Preposition
—
except
He ate everything but the meat.
Any day but tomorrow would be fine.
I forgot my bag. I guess there's nothing to do but go back.
but
Adverb
—
only
There is but one sun and one earth to live on.
wrong
Adjective
—
If something is wrong, it is not right. If something is wrong it may be incorrect, not true, or bad.
That answer is wrong.
"2 + 2 = 5" is wrong.
—
If something is wrong, it is not moral.
What you did was wrong.
wrong
Verb
—
If you wrong someone, you do something that hurts a person.
He wrongs you by his actions.
wrong
Noun
—
A wrong is an immoral act.
They accused him of wrongs against humanity.