0
Anonymous Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

on the right in front of you?

Can you see the big tree on the right in front of you?

In this sentence, I was wondering 'right' 'on the right in front of you' is used in the sense of (direction) or (exactly, just)?
  

Top answer

Anonymous I was wondering 'right' 'on the right in front of you' is used in the sense of (direction) or (exactly, just)? Direction: 'on the right'. '

  • Anonymous I was wondering 'right' 'on the right in front of you' is used in the sense of (direction) or (exactly, just)?
  • Direction: 'on the right'.
  • '
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

2 Answers
0
AnonymousI was wondering 'right' 'on the right in front of you' is used in the sense of (direction) or (exactly, just)?
Direction: 'on the right'.
For 'exactly', it would have to read: 'Can you see the big tree right in front of you?'
0
The sentence was kind of messy, but i still understand it. But here's what i think.
If the sentence WAS "Can you see the big tree on the right in front of you?", that means the 'right' is used as the sense of direction.
But, if the sentence was wrong and the writer was supposed to write "Can you see the big tree right in front of you?", then the 'right' is used as the 'exactly, just' sense

Related Questions