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wrought
/ rɔːt /
verb
archaic, a past tense and past participle of work
adjective
metallurgy shaped by hammering or beating
(often in combination) formed, fashioned, or worked as specified
well-wrought
decorated or made with delicate care
Usage
Other Word Forms
- interwrought adjective
- self-wrought adjective
- superwrought adjective
- underwrought adjective
- unwrought adjective
- well-wrought adjective
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of wrought1
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
It would be decades, however, before the FBI itself offered anything close to an apology, let alone any effort to repair the carnage it had wrought.
That moral collapse would be evident in the devastation wrought upon the German cities of Hamburg and Dresden, as well as in the similar destruction inflicted by the firebombing of Tokyo and other Japanese cities.
"People may be talking about emotionally wrought problems and for those people, being put through a bot, even briefly, might cause more upset," she says.
What loneliness plus technology hath wrought is a central theme of Kurosawa’s, and he’s tried to warn us.
Look at their respective posters: One is wrought in a palette evoking dried blood and burning sunsets.
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