dead to rights
English
    
    Etymology
    
US, 1854, originally New York City criminal slang,[1] thence entered general use. dead (“completely, utterly”) + to rights (“properly”).
Pronunciation
    
- Audio (AU) - (file) 
Adverb
    
dead to rights (not comparable)
- (US, idiomatic) With sufficient evidence to establish responsibility definitively.
- Because of the video replay, the ref had him dead to rights on the penalty.
- have someone dead to rights on something
 
Synonyms
    
See also
    
References
    
- Vocabulum: Or, The Rogue's Lexicon. Comp. from the Most Authentic Sources, George Washington Matsell (1859), p. 25: “DEAD TO RIGHTS. Positively guilty, and no way of getting clear.”
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