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right

Shortened form of "I know, right." Used to indicate agreement, often on such a level as to question the need for the statement being agreed to

"That guy tried to Lars me in court today!"
"Right!"

by boffus July 16, 2003

93๐Ÿ‘ 54๐Ÿ‘Ž


right?

Sentence ending or interjection used when trying to make a point.

Trolls are really just victims of surface dwellers' oppression, right? I mean, it's our society that forces ugliness underground.

by SNUPERDUPERBEDUPER February 13, 2011

15๐Ÿ‘ 7๐Ÿ‘Ž


right

A colloquial description of the perfect relationship. Epitomised by the Scottish/Australian/New Zealing Writer "Brown Strawbridge" in his post-modern erotic novel "Leesa and Rob"

"We are so right for each other"
"as right as Leesa and Rob?"
"no, don't be stupid, nobody could be that right. That's a myth"

by The Doctor...Indy May 6, 2013

7๐Ÿ‘ 3๐Ÿ‘Ž


right there

synonym of right on or spot on

Their performance is just brilliant. It's spot on, it's right there, I'm a fan.

by Bodhistiva July 3, 2008

43๐Ÿ‘ 24๐Ÿ‘Ž


right

well, it is a very complicated concept really. It is hard to explain in words so ill be leaving you wit this -----> that might be a clue. if not, i will understand. put up both of ur hands so the thumb and the pointer finger makes an "L" on each finger. Which ever "L" is facing the right way is left. Right is the other one. if u dont know ur alphabet than u wouldnt be able to read this anyway. if someone is reading this for u, then fuck that person. sphinkter boy

Ching: hey man, turn right at this next intersection. This is extremely important.
Wang: O.K. left it is.

by ice up da cornhole April 12, 2007

149๐Ÿ‘ 108๐Ÿ‘Ž


rights

Used in the North East of England, in place of the phrase: "damn right!"

1. Person A: Want a beer?

Person B: Aye, rights I do!!

by MichaelToTheJ September 22, 2007

41๐Ÿ‘ 26๐Ÿ‘Ž


right

In England: During information-gathering conversations, "right" is an unconsciously uttered filler word that precedes the response to a question. The duration of the utterance is directly related to the assuredness of the response that follows. Short utterances indicate that respondents are confident of their answers. Drawn-out utterances denote that respondents have less confidence in their answers. When the pronunciation is drawn-out excessively, respondents are signaling that they do not know the correct answer, yet feel obliged to respond anyway.

"How many eggs should I use in this quiche?"

"Right. Three eggs ought to be enough."

"What is the most direct route to Scarborough Fair?"

"Ri-i-i-ght. I believe you follow this road to a roundabout, and go west."

"Is the library open on Sunday?"

"Ri-i-i-i-i-i-i-i-i-i-i-i-i-ight. I do remember a time when the library was open seven days a week."

by Alan Cantor November 27, 2005

32๐Ÿ‘ 21๐Ÿ‘Ž