12. “Right aft,” that is, in direct line with the axis and stern of the ship.
This class includes:
22. “You say not right, old man.”
23. “A right description of our sport, my Lord.”
24. “There hath been a terrible to-do, I could not possibly learn the very right of it.”
25. “You are certainly in the right.”
26. “To put the saddle on the right horse.” (That is, to impute blame where it is deserved.)
27. “The clock that stands still points right twice in the four and twenty hours; while others may keep going continually and be continually going wrong.”
28. “A fool must now and then be right by chance.”