English

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Etymology

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Compound of wrong +‎ think, probably modelled on earlier crimethink from George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four.

Noun

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wrongthink (usually uncountable, plural wrongthinks)

  1. Beliefs or opinions that run contrary to the prevailing or mainstream orthodoxy.
    Synonyms: badthink, crimethink, wrongthought
    • 1979, Joan Didion, The White Album:
      In other words I spent yesterday in bed with a headache not merely because of my bad attitudes, unpleasant tempers and wrongthink, but because both my grandmothers had migraine, my father has migraine and my mother has migraine.
    • 2017 August 8, Ben Domenech, “Could This Man Work At Google?”, in The Federalist[1]:
      The third, and most grievous of all the wrongthinks, is suggesting that men and women are, in general, physiologically and psychologically different from each other, and thus they tend to excel at different things.
    • 2020 June 11, David Bernstein, “The Revolution is Eating its Own”, in The Volokh Conspiracy[2]:
      Fang, fearing for his job, had to issue a Maoist-style apology for reporting wrongthink.

Derived terms

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Usage notes

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  • With its Orwellian roots, use of the word implies that freedom of opinion is being suppressed.

Verb

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wrongthink (third-person singular simple present wrongthinks, present participle wrongthinking, simple past and past participle wrongthought)

  1. (intransitive, rare) To engage in wrongthink.
    • 2017 June 30, Henry Wolff, “The Freedom Center Beats the Southern Poverty Law Center”, in American Renaissance[3]:
      Post a conservative story on Facebook or search for it on Google and out pops Snopes, a partisan site, to warn you of wrongthinking.
    • 2017 December 21, Ganker, “A joke, a media storm, and a destroyed life... Is ‘Magic: The Gathering’ the next Gamergate?”, in Ganker[4]:
      Hasbro has sent a clear signal to men, to Trump supporters, and to anyone who wrongthinks: you are not welcome, and we will purge you.
    • 2022 June 13, Abigail Shrier, “Welcome to the Party, Pal”, in The Truth Fairy[5]:
      Wrongthinking friends are kicked off of PayPal and Etsy and Twitter, of course, with increasing frequency.