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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In pursuing those claims, the aggrieved generally try to prove a resort demonstrated gross negligence by contributing in some significant way to their mishap.—Gregory Thomas, San Francisco Chronicle, 18 Mar. 2026 If Kennedy is the face of the movement, Bigtree is more like its id—loud, unfiltered, and theatrically aggrieved.—Tom Bartlett, The Atlantic, 24 Feb. 2026 And my colleagues do not seem to be aggrieved about this.—Tara Suter, The Hill, 12 Feb. 2026 For those of us who love to be aggrieved, just as much enjoyment can be found in rooting against a certain film.—Nate Jones, Vulture, 31 Jan. 2026 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."