wrong implies inflicting injury either unmerited or out of proportion to what one deserves.
a penal system that had wronged him
oppress suggests inhumane imposing of burdens one cannot endure or exacting more than one can perform.
a people oppressed by a warmongering tyrant
persecute implies a relentless and unremitting subjection to annoyance or suffering.
a child persecuted by constant criticism
aggrieve implies suffering caused by an infringement or denial of rights.
a legal aid society representing aggrieved minority groups
Examples of aggrieve in a Sentence
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When Arthur Ashe rejects her appeal to support the cause of the women’s player, she is aggrieved.—Charles McNulty, Los Angeles Times, 20 June 2023 And while many of Erdogan’s critics are aggrieved, others saw no viable option besides the president.—Nadeen Ebrahim, CNN, 29 May 2023 The order ends with the judge saying that many of the people who are able to talk about their experiences in Alaska’s child welfare system are so aggrieved by it that they are not listened to.—Michelle Theriault Boots, Anchorage Daily News, 24 May 2023 Now, rather than view North Korea as an unruly, angry neighbor, China has welcomed it, along with Russia and Iran, as part of what White House officials call a coalition of the aggrieved.—Choe Sang-Hun, New York Times, 26 Apr. 2023 See all Example Sentences for aggrieve
Word History
Etymology
Middle English agreven "to affect adversely, disturb, distress," borrowed from Anglo-French agrever "to make burdensome, worsen," going back to Latin aggravāre "to weigh down, burden, make worse" — more at aggravate
Note:
The vowel -e- in agrever shows influence of grever "to grieve."
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