Englishfor English speakers
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.
for
Preposition
—
shows that something belongs to something else, or has a specific function
This cake is for you.
This is a net for catching fish.
—
For is used to show the reason for something
He was angry, for he had never been called such terrible names before.
for
Subordinator
—
For introduces a clause with a subject and a to-infinitive
It's not good for you to be too relaxed.
age
Noun
—
Something's age is how long it has existed or been alive; how old something is.
The boy said he was age five.
Scott is showing his age.
—
An age is a time period.
The 1960s was a new age in music.
age
Verb
—
To get older.
Lillian has aged gracefully.