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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a rightness" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing a quality of being correct, just, or appropriate in a particular context.
Example: "In her argument, she emphasized the importance of a rightness that transcends mere opinion."
Alternatives: "a correctness" or "an appropriateness".
Exact(21)
When I ask Nate Carlson, Payne's graphic designer and an Omaha native, if he thinks Payne got Omaha right, he replies: "Yes, but it's a rightness you don't think about.
But he also knew that it had a rightness in it.
What a rightness, then, in the end, to be put to rest in nature.
A rightness like a heavy oak door clicking softly home on to its latch.
She feels a "rightness" in grouping the work of cultural others together.
What's more, there is a rightness in having a neighbourly Hardy and Housman here – Housman is Hardy's poetic pallbearer too.
Similar(39)
In a world of competition, frenzied chatter, control-obsession, there is a terrible aptness, a rhetorical rightness, in a God who speaks in a child's cry.
The narrative is powered by Ged's vices and virtues, and this intertwining of character and plot gives A Wizard of Earthsea an inherent rightness, like a progression of unexpected yet satisfying chord changes.
"He wasn't a Galileo or a Newton, but there was a fundamental rightness to his approach," Mr. Kemp explained.
And, while dystopian novels are depressing, there's a certain "rightness" in reading about a future that's negative.
The equations have a precision and elegance, a magnificent serenity, an indisputable rightness.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com