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Definition 2024
bang_to_rights
bang to rights
English
Alternative forms
Phrase
- (Britain) Used other than as an idiom: bang (adverb), to rights.
- 2004, Brian S. McWilliams, Spam Kings, O’Reilly Media (2005), ISBN 978-0-596-00732-4, page 69:
- 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.”
- 2007, Neil Pearson, Obelisk: A History of Jack Kahane and the Obelisk Press, page 479:
- 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.
- 2008, James Buchan, The gate of air:
- He wished he were in London, where a girl in a minicab would set him bang to rights.
- 2004, Brian S. McWilliams, Spam Kings, O’Reilly Media (2005), ISBN 978-0-596-00732-4, page 69:
- (Britain, idiomatic) Red-handed.
Synonyms
Etymology 2
From reinterpretation of bang (“completely”) as bang (“to handle noisily or violently”)
Verb
- (rare, Britain, idiomatic) To have sufficient, indisputable evidence that a person's actions are generally perceived to be wrong; to catch red-handed.
- 2007 May 26, The Week, 615, 6:
- Good week for: Cyclists, after Britain's most prolific bicycle thief was banged to rights.
- 2009 February 4, “Batman turns air blue in Terminator tantrum”, in Belfast Telegraph:
- His alter-ego Batman utters nothing more provocative than the occasional “holy smoke” as he bangs adversaries to rights
- 2010, Peter James, Dead Simple:
- He'd been untouchable for the past decade, but now Roy Grace had finally banged him to rights.
- 2007 May 26, The Week, 615, 6: