rightful
/ˈraɪtfl/ (bre, ipa) · /ˈraɪtfl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈrīt-fəl/ (ame, mw)
rightful — adjective
- rightfulpositive
- more rightfulcomparative
- most rightfulsuperlative
1. describes a position, claim, or status that a person has a moral or legal right
describes a position, claim, or status that a person has a moral or legal right to hold or receive — for example, being the person who should own something, inherit something, or occupy a role based on justice or law.
The antique vase was returned to its rightful owner, a museum in Kyoto.
collocation: rightful owner
Tanvi argued in court that she was the rightful heir to the estate.
collocation: rightful heir
After the election, the rightful winner was finally allowed to take office.
Mizuki believed the promotion was her rightful reward for ten years of hard work.
- legitimate
more formal; focuses on legal validity or accepted standards (a legitimate business claim)
- lawful
strictly about compliance with written law; less moral nuance (lawful owner)
- just
broader moral fairness; less tied to specific legal title (a just outcome)
- due
focuses on what is owed or merited based on effort or circumstance (due reward)
- illegitimate
lacking legal or moral right
- unlawful
against the law
文法句型
rightful + noun
用法筆記
Attributive use only — placed directly before the noun it modifies (the rightful owner, the rightful heir). Not used after a linking verb; you cannot say 'the owner is rightful.'