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NL888 Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

Does "the rights" mean "the right things an individual has done"?

Context:

a China that draws on the rights, strengths and creativity of individual Chinese like you.
  

Top answer

NL888 Does "the rights" mean "the right things an individual has done"? In my opinion, it does not. I read it as "rights" in the "American" sense, but there's not much context here.

  • NL888 Does "the rights" mean "the right things an individual has done"?
  • In my opinion, it does not.
  • I read it as "rights" in the "American" sense, but there's not much context here.
  • Your rights to do certain things may be considered an asset which others may draw on.
  • " )
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1 Answers
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NL888 Does "the rights" mean "the right things an individual has done"?
In my opinion, it does not.

I read it as "rights" in the "American" sense, but there's not much context here.

Your rights to do certain things may be considered an asset which others may draw on.
(These rights may enable your creativity.) (I'm no

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