rightways
English
editEtymology
editThis etymology is incomplete. You can help Wiktionary by elaborating on the origins of this term.
Adjective
editrightways (not comparable)
- In a correct or normal orientation.
- 2004, Andrew Klavan, Dynamite Road, page 96:
- She leaned forward, tilted her head, as if to get a rightways look at the snapshot herself
- 2011, Stacy Carlson, Among the Wonderful:
- Just get out of my way and I'll be rightways up and out of this cursed tunnel.
- 2012, Di Morrissey, Kimberley Sun:
- She began to lose her sense of perspective, what was rightways up or down.
Adverb
editrightways (comparative more rightways, superlative most rightways)
- In a normal or correct orientation.
- 2004, Ronne Hartfield, Another Way Home: The Tangled Roots of Race in One Chicago Family, page 111:
- Such hands could turn the unborn child rightways in the birth canal
- 2007, Robert Amos, Artists in Their Studios: Where Art Is Born, page 25:
- When I work on it rightways up, I am conscious of the figuration. When I work on it upside down, then I'm thinking of the space
- 2009, Tim Sandlin, Rowdy in Paris:
- I went out to the hallway to turn the mop bucket back rightways and consider the options.
- Rightward.
- 1918, William Hay, The escape of the notorious Sir William Heans, page 398:
- Conapanny did not make at once east up the hill, but led a course slanting rightways over the shoulder, descending about four o'clock into the gully on the hinder side
- 1987, R. Conrad, Act of Writing, page 17:
- But the trees went uphill and down, turned leftways and rightways, without landmarks or anything to orient me with the tracks.
- 1997, Jack Womack, Elvissey, page 160:
- "They're trying to take out the tires," John said, wheeling rightways.
- Rightly.
- 1878, Jean Middlemass, “Peter Stott's Dream”, in Belgravia, volume 34, page 25:
- Now, that is a thing as I never was asked for before, and don't rightways know what it be; if it's sealing-wax, it's welcome you are