Nothing is wrong with that
Nothing is wrong with that
Personally, I don't think there is anything wrong with it. Personally, I believe I am correct.
there is nothing wrong with this sentence
The jury voted for acquittal because he didn't do anything wrong.
"I didn't do anything wrong," said the raccoon looking harried.
You can use the transitive verb "wrong" in a sentence by following it with an object. For example, "He wronged me by spreading false rumors." In this sentence, "me" is the object that was affected by the action of being wronged.
It is written in the passive voice
The sentence is grammatically incorrect. It should be structured as "Taking a psychology test," with the subject preceding the action.
The sentence given is not technically wrong, but it is not idiomatic: Most English speakers prefer gerundive rather than infinite constructions in such sentence and would reword the sentence to read, "You regret having taken the dog on holiday with you."
She said, "Mr Johnson never did anything wrong to me" which carried the innuendo that he had done something wrong to someone else.
Nobody saw anything coming.
Although the spelling may be wrong in places, the sentence is true.