Learn English – “What’s wrong in/with this question?”

grammaticalityprepositionsword-choice

Is it better to say:

What's wrong with something?

or

What's wrong in something?

Best Answer

The choice of prepositions for this kind of expression is really arbitrary and sometimes varies by region. Most people are used to the expression "wrong with" meaning a defect, whereas wrong meaning incorrect might take "in." For example, the use of the Cyrillic alphabet would be wrong in this context.

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