injustice applies to any act that involves unfairness to another or violation of one's rights.
the injustices suffered by the lower classes
injury applies in law specifically to an injustice for which one may sue to recover compensation.
libel constitutes a legal injury
wrong applies also in law to any act punishable according to the criminal code; it may apply more generally to any flagrant injustice.
determined to right society's wrongs
grievance applies to a circumstance or condition that constitutes an injustice to the sufferer and gives just ground for complaint.
a list of employee grievances
Examples of grievance in a Sentence
He has a deep sense of grievance against his former employer.
She has been nursing a grievance all week.
In the petition, the students listed their many grievances against the university administration.
Several customers came to the front desk to air their grievances.
Recent Examples on the Web
Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to
show current usage.Read More
Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors.
Send us feedback.
Armenians at home and in the diaspora voiced their outrage at the friendly message, drawing up grievances and cursing the government, often with expletives.—Brady Knox, The Washington Examiner, 25 Apr. 2026 Booker wasn’t the only Sun airing grievances.—Hanna Wickes, Miami Herald, 23 Apr. 2026 The Suns now head home facing a 2-0 deficit and carrying a very public grievance about how the series is being called.—Hanna Wickes, Sacbee.com, 23 Apr. 2026 The 48-year-old killer of the MIT physicist, who in a video confession expressed vague grievances dating back to his early adulthood, also shot 11 people at Brown University, killing two, before dying by suicide.—Dan Adler, Vanity Fair, 22 Apr. 2026 See All Example Sentences for grievance
Word History
Etymology
Middle English grevaunce, grevance "offense, ground for complaint, resentment, hardship, sickness," borrowed from Anglo-French, from grever "to be a burden to, harm, afflict" + -aunce, -ance-ance — more at grieve
: a cause of distress (as an unsatisfactory working condition or unfair labor practice) felt to afford a reason for complaint or dispute
especially: a violation of a collective bargaining agreement usually by the employer
2
: the formal expression of a grievance brought especially by an employee as the initial step toward resolution through a grievance procedure see also arbitration, grievance arbitration at arbitration, mediation