We have no meanings for "particularly wrong" in our records yet.
1 And for some reason, there was nothing particularly wrong with thinking it didn't.
2 I never heard of anything particularly wrong that he did.
3 It is assuming a superiority, and it is particularly wrong to question a man concerning himself.
4 It is particularly wrong for an organisation that campaigns against sexual harassment and the abuse of power.
5 I gasped at the monstrous proposition; but Barbara did not seem to detect anything particularly wrong about it.
6 In fact, except for the discomfort, there wasn't anything particularly wrong with spending a day sitting under a tree.
7 Nothing particularly wrong with it.
8 There was nothing particularly wrong with Charles's legs, except that his feet were in ordinary school shoes and soaked through.
9 There was nothing particularly wrong with Shimao's driving, but the noise in back was terrible, and the suspension was nearly shot.
10 Sally could not help wondering whether things were going particularly wrong to-day, or whether this was one of Mr. Bunbury's ordinary mornings.
11 He wanted her to go on, at least, and felt stealing over him a conviction that she couldn't have done so particularly wrong .
12 "Anything particularly wrong or fatal in my general appearance?"
Grammar, pronunciation and more
This collocation consists of: Particularly wrong through the time