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Meaning of bang to rights | Babel Free

Adverb CEFR C1

Definitions

  1. Red-handed, (caught) in the act.
    British, idiomatic, not-comparable, usually
  2. Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see bang (adverb), to rights.
    not-comparable, usually

Examples

“We had a man once who got caught with a bundle of railroad stocks. They got him bang to rights and would have shoved him, only[…] when he swore he’d found them, they couldn’t prove he hadn’t.”
“The silk! Hide it! Throw it away! If they get us with that—we’re bang to rights.”
“Looking at the evidence, I’d assumed that the hapless pair was bang to rights and that we’d have little trouble placing him on remand and giving the law-abiding residents of Surrey a brief respite.”
“Once, after a spammer trolled Nanae, accusing antis of having no life, Mad Pierre sarcastically responded that the spammer was correct. ¶ “Damn, you’ve got us bang to rights. We have no lives. None. At all.””
“Tyler tries to dismiss Vidal's characterization of him as a pseudo-intellectual buffoon, but succeeds only in demonstrating that Vidal had him bang to rights.”
“He wished he were in London, where a girl in a minicab would set him bang to rights.”

CEFR level

C1
Advanced
This word is part of the CEFR C1 vocabulary — advanced level.

See also

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