wrong-foot
verb /ˌrɒŋ ˈfʊt/
  /ˌrɔːŋ ˈfʊt/
(British English)Verb Forms
| present simple I / you / we / they wrong-foot |    /ˌrɒŋ ˈfʊt/   /ˌrɔːŋ ˈfʊt/  | 
| he / she / it wrong-foots |    /ˌrɒŋ ˈfʊts/   /ˌrɔːŋ ˈfʊts/  | 
| past simple wrong-footed |    /ˌrɒŋ ˈfʊtɪd/   /ˌrɔːŋ ˈfʊtɪd/  | 
| past participle wrong-footed |    /ˌrɒŋ ˈfʊtɪd/   /ˌrɔːŋ ˈfʊtɪd/  | 
| -ing form wrong-footing |    /ˌrɒŋ ˈfʊtɪŋ/   /ˌrɔːŋ ˈfʊtɪŋ/  | 
- wrong-foot somebody to put somebody in a difficult or embarrassing situation by doing something that they do not expect
- It was an attempt to wrong-foot the opposition.
 - His low pass wrong-footed the other team’s defence.