Entitlement vs Aright - What's the difference?
entitlement | aright |
The right to have something.
Something that one is entitled to.
(politics) A legal obligation on a government to make payments to a person, business, or unit of government that meets the criteria set in law, such as social security in the US.
Rightly, correctly; in the right way or form.
*, I.56:
To make right; put right; arrange or treat properly.
* 2003 , John Beebe, Terror, Violence, and the Impulse to Destroy :
As a noun entitlement
is the right to have something.As an adverb aright is
rightly, correctly; in the right way or form.As a verb aright is
to make right; put right; arrange or treat properly.entitlement
English
Noun
(en noun)aright
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl) .Adverb
(en adverb)- it is not easie we should so often settle our minds in so regular, so reformed, and so devout a seat, where indeed it ought to be, to pray aright and effectually: otherwise our praiers are not only vaine and unprofitable, but vicious.
Etymology 2
From (etyl) arighten, .Verb
(en verb)- But, from working with those who have felt exiled and damned, excoriated and benumbed, and yet have made it back to useful and creative life again, I know there are more sure, albeit intense, ways to aright oneself.
