countable
count
common
abstruct
appropriate, good, honest, right-handed, advantage.
inappropriate, evil, bad, dishonest, left-handed, disadvantage.
You are right about this.
أنت محق في هذا.
You can't do that! I have rights!
لا يمكنك فعل ذلك! لدي حقوق!
Turn right at the intersection.
انعطف يمينًا عند التقاطع.
You have the right to remain silent.
لديك الحق في التزام الصمت.
The maximum angle recorded was 111 degrees right.
أقصى زاوية مسجلة كانت 111 درجة يمينًا.
How should National Human Rights Institutions assess themselves?
كيف ينبغي للمؤسسات الوطنية لحقوق الإنسان تقييم نفسها؟
The right business relationship benefits both parties.
علاقة العمل الصحيحة تفيد الطرفين.
The military committed serious human rights abuses.
ارتكب الجيش انتهاكات جسيمة لحقوق الإنسان.
Move the right foot forward next to the left foot.
حرك القدم اليمنى إلى الأمام بجانب القدم اليسرى.
bang to rights
دليل الإدانة القاطع
we've got you bang to rights handling stolen property
be in the right
على حق
Sean was not going to apologize as he believed he was in the right
by rights
إذا حدثت الأشياء بشكل عادل أو صحيح
by rights, he should not be playing next week
Old English riht (West Saxon, Kentish), reht (Anglian), "that which is morally right, duty, obligation," also "rule of conduct; law of a land;" also "what someone deserves; a just claim, what is due, equitable treatment;" also "correctness, truth;" also "a legal entitlement (to possession of property, etc.), a privilege," from Proto-Germanic *rehtan (see right (adj.1)). In Middle English often contrasted to might or wrong. From early 14c. as "a right action, a good deed," hence the right "that which is just or true, righteousness."
The meaning "the right hand or right side" (as opposed to the left) is from mid-13c.; see right (adj.2) for sense development. As "the right wing of an army" by 1707. Political use is from 1825. Meaning "a blow with the right fist" is from 1898; the meaning "a right-hand turn" is by 1961. The phrase to rights "at once, straightway" is 1660s, from an earlier meaning "in a proper manner" (Middle English). Adjectival phrase right-to-work is attested from 1958; right-to-die by 1976. To do or something in one's own right (1610s) is from the legal use for "title or claim to something possessed by one or more".