[right field]{n.} The part of a baseball outfield to the batter’s
right. •/Left-handed batters usually hit to right field./ Compare: CENTER
FIELD, LEFT FIELD. — [right fielder] {n.} The outfielder in baseball
who plays in right field. •/The batter hit a high fly ball and the right
fielder caught it easily./
[right-hand man]{v. phr.} A valued and indispensable assistant.
•/The chancellor of the university never goes anywhere without the vice
chancellor, his right-hand man, whose judgment he greatly trusts./
[right on]{adj.}, {interj.}, {slang}, {informal} 1.
Exclamation of animated approval "Yes," "That’s correct," "You’re telling the
truth," "we believe you," etc. •/Orator: And we shall see the promised land!
Crowd: Right on!/ 2. Correct; to the point; accurate. •/The reverend’s
remark was right on!/
[right out] or [straight out] {adv.} Plainly; in a way that hides
nothing; without waiting or keeping back anything. •/When Mother asked who
broke the window, Jimmie told her right out that he did it./ •/When Ann
entered the beauty contest her little brother told her straight out that she
was crazy./
[right side of the tracks] See: THE TRACKS.
[right-wing]{adj.} Being or belonging to a political group which
opposes any important change in the way the country is run. •/Some countries
with right-wing governments have dictators./ Contrast: LEFT-WING.
[rig out]{v. phr.} To overdecorate; doll up; dress up. •/Ann arrived
all rigged out in her newest Parisian summer outfit./
[Riley] See: LIFE OF RILEY.
[ring] See: GIVE A RING, RUN CIRCLES AROUND or RUN RINGS AROUND, THREE-RING
CIRCUS, THROW ONE’S HAT IN THE RING.
[ring a bell]{v. phr.} To make you remember something; sound familiar.
•/Not even the cat’s meowing seemed to ring a bell with Judy. She still
forgot to feed him./ •/When Ann told Jim the name of the new teacher it
rang a bell, and Jim said, "I went to school with a James Carson."/
[ring in]{v. phr.}, {informal} 1. To bring in (someone or
something) from the outside dishonestly or without telling; often: hire and
introduce under a false name. •/Bob offered to ring him in on the party by
pretending he was a cousin from out of town./ •/No wonder their team beat
us; they rang in a professional to pitch for them under the name of Dan
Smith./ 2. To ring a special clock that records the time you work. •/We
have to ring in at the shop before eight o’clock in the morning./
[ringleader]{n. phr.} The chief of an unsavory group; a higher-up.
•/The FBI finally caught up with the ringleader of the dope smugglers from
South America./
[ring out]{v.} To ring a special clock that records the time you leave
work. •/Charles can’t leave early in his new job; he has to ring out./
[ring the changes]{v. phr.} To say or do the same thing in different
ways; repeat the same idea in many ways. •/David wanted a new bicycle and he
kept ringing the changes on it all day until his parents got angry at him./
•/A smart girl saves money on clothes by learning to ring the changes on a
few dresses and clothes./
[ring true]{v. phr.} To have a tone of genuineness; sound convincing.
•/I believed his sob story about how he lost his fortune, because somehow it
all rang true./
[ring up]{v.} 1. To add and record on a cash register. •/The
supermarket clerk rang up Mrs. Smith’s purchases and told her she owed $33./
•/Business was bad Tuesday; we didn’t ring up a sale all morning./ 2.
{informal} To telephone. •/Sally rang up Sue and told her the news./
[riot] See: READ THE RIOT ACT, RUN RIOT.
[ripe] See: TIME IS RIPE.
[rip into] or [tear into] {v.}, {informal} 1. To start a fight
with; attack. •/The puppy is tearing into the big dog./ Syn.: PITCH INTO.
2. To quarrel with; scold. •/Mrs. Brown ripped into her daughter for coming
home late./ Syn.: BAWL OUT, LACE INTO, LAY OUT, LET HAVE IT.
[rip off]{v.}, {slang} (Stress on "off") Steal. •/The hippies
ripped off the grocery store./
[rip-off]{n.}, {slang} (Stress on "rip") An act of stealing or
burglary. •/Those food prices are so high, it’s almost a rip-off./
[rise] See: GET A RISE OUT OF, GIVE RISE TO.
[rise from the ashes]{v. phr.} To rise from ruin; start anew. •/A
year after flunking out of medical school, Don rose from the ashes and passed
his qualifying exams for the M.D. with honors./
[rise in the world] See: COME UP IN THE WORLD.
[rise to]{v.} To succeed in doing what is expected by trying
especially hard in or on; show that you are able to do or say what is needed or
proper in or on. •/Jane was surprised when the principal handed her the
prize, but she rose to the occasion with a speech of thanks./ •/When
Michael became sick on the day before the program, Paul rose to the need and
learned Michael’s part./
[rise up]{v. phr.} To stage a rebellion; revolt. •/The people
finally rose up and communism came to an end in Eastern Europe./
[risk] See: CALCULATED RISK, RUN A RISK.
[road] See: ALL ROADS LEAD TO ROME, BURN UP THE ROAD, END OF THE ROAD, GET
THE SHOW ON THE ROAD, HIT THE ROAD, HUG THE ROAD, MIDDLE OF THE ROAD, ON THE
ROAD.
[road gang]{n.} A group of men who work at road construction.
•/Football players often work with road gangs during summer vacations./
[road hog]{n.}, {informal} A car driver who takes more than his
share of the road. •/A road hog forced John’s car into the ditch./
[road show]{n.} A theatrical play that is performed for a few days in
one town and then moves to other towns. •/Many actors get their start in road
shows./ •/The road show is often not as good as the original play on
Broadway./
[road sign]{n.} A sign on which there is information about a road or
places; a sign with directions to drivers. •/The road sign read, "25 MPH
LIMIT" but Jack drove along at fifty miles an hour./ •/The road sign said
Westwood was four miles away./
[road test]{n.} 1. A test to see if you can drive a car. •/Jim took
the road test and got his driver’s license last week./ 2. A test to see if a
car works all right on the road. •/Most new cars are given road tests before
they are put on the market./ •/After he repaired the car, the mechanic gave
it a road test./
[roast] See: WEINER ROAST or HOT DOG ROAST.
[roasting ear]{n.} An ear of corn young and tender enough to be cooked
and eaten; also corn cooked on the cob. •/The scouts buried the roasting ears
in the coals of their campfire./ •/At the Fourth of July picnic we had
fried chicken and roasting ears./
[robbery] See: HIGHWAY ROBBERY.
[robin] See: ROUND ROBIN.
[rob Peter to pay Paul]{v. phr.} To change one duty or need for
another; take from one person or thing to pay another. •/Bill owed Sam a
dollar, so he borrowed another from Joe to pay Sam back. He robbed Peter to pay
Paul./ •/Trying to study a lesson for one class during another class is
like robbing Peter to pay Paul./
[rob the cradle]{v. phr.}, {informal} To have dates with or marry
a person much younger than yourself. •/When the old woman married a young
man, everyone said she was robbing the cradle./ — [cradle-robber]
{n.} •/The judge died when he was seventy. He was a real cradle-robber
because he left a thirty-year-old widow./ — [cradle-robbing] {adj.}
or {n.} •/Bob is seventeen and I just saw him with a girl about twelve
years old. Has he started cradle-robbing? No, that girl was his sister, not his
date!/