right of way
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: right-of-way
English
Alternative forms
- right-of-way, ROW (abbreviation)
Noun
right of way (countable and uncountable, plural rights of way or right of ways)
- (uncountable) The right to proceed first in traffic, on land, on water or in the air. Also in metaphorical senses.
- 1994, Di Goodman, Ian Brodie, Learning to Sail, →ISBN, page 86:
- Even when you have the right of way, you must take action to avoid a collision if another boat fails to give way.
- (countable) A legal right of passage over another's land or pathways.
- (countable) A strip of land or alignment where portions of a roadway, railway, power line, or other utilities and their associated structures and facilities is located or passes acquired through eminent domain or expropriation.
- Meronym: permanent way
- (countable) Land on which a right of way exists.
- 1970, Diana L. Reische, Problems of Mass Transportation, →ISBN, page 143:
- New York's Metropolitan Transportation Authority plans a rail line on an unused right of way of the Long Island Rail Road between JFK and Penn Station to whisk passengers to midtown Manhattan in twenty minutes.
- (countable) The area modified for passage of a railway; often specifically the railbed and tracks.
- Synonym: permanent way
- 2006, Jane Bloodworth Rowe, “Ferrell Parkway”, in Echoes from the Poisoned Well: Global Memories of Environmental Injustice, →ISBN, page 187:
- Mayne, speaking at the 1999 meeting, ranked the trees along the right-of-way as "old growth" or "rare," although she never defined these terms.
- (fencing, uncountable) The priority granted to the first person to properly execute an attack.
- 2002, Elaine Cheris, Fencing: Steps to Success, →ISBN, page 63:
- In foil the important thing is to be sure you have the right of way. You gain right of way by starting the attack first or beating the blade last.
- (Wisconsin) The strip of grass between the sidewalk and the street.
Usage notes
- The plural "rights of way" can be used for all senses. The alternative plural "right of ways" is generally used only when referring to a strip of land or alignment where portions of an infrastructure and their associated structures and facilities are located, and may be regarded as an error.
- In sense 1 the phrase is often used without a preceding article; e.g. to have right of way.
Translations
right to proceed first in traffic
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legal right of passage
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strip of land or alignment where portions of an infrastructure and their associated structures and facilities is located
land on which a right of way exists
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area modified for passage of a railway
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