0 past simple and past participle of wrong --
1 to treat someone in an unfair or unacceptable way: --
She felt deeply wronged by his accusations.
People have been wronged, but have their interests been set back?
I would argue instead that a debt remains a debt unless something can be given in reparation to the wronged party.
But it does not oblige the wronged party to forgive the wrongdoer.
For he says to you that if he has wronged you, he will repair that, to your satisfaction.
It properly recognizes that these women would have been wronged if they were not told about the study.
Members could be misreported to the king and thereby wronged.
We can take for granted here that those who never exist at all cannot be harmed, in any morally significant sense, or wronged.
A somewhat different tack proposes that a person can be wronged even in a case in which he or she has not been harmed.