in the right, be



in the right, be

Have the support of fact, justice, or reason. For example, Nancy's parents were in the right when they took her teacher to task, or, as Shakespeare put it in Richard III (5:3): "He was in the right, and so indeed it is." [Late 1400s] Also see the antonym in the wrong.

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Xanthippi-Greek
Abrahamson['eibrəhæmsn]
Osberht-Anglo-Saxon
Tzipporah-Hebrew, Biblical Hebrew
Aelia-Ancient Roman
Edwin['edwin]