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Showing results for right-to-life. Search instead for right-to-lifer.

right-to-life

American  
[rahyt-tuh-lahyf] / ˈraɪt təˈlaɪf /

adjective

  1. pertaining to or advocating laws making abortion, especially abortion-on-demand, illegal; antiabortion.

    right-to-life advocates.


Other Word Forms

  • right-to-lifer noun

Etymology

Origin of right-to-life

First recorded in 1970–75

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

He had spent his adult life trying to succeed in conservative politics, working with right-to-life groups and other activists, as well as repeatedly running for office and failing.

From Salon • May 7, 2025

She cannot imagine donating them to another couple, in effect letting strangers bear and raise her children, a process which many in the right-to-life movement call a “snowflake adoption.”

From New York Times • Jul. 5, 2022

By the mid-2000s, however, other conservative attorneys and movements sometimes took the lead in major campaign finance cases and pursued a different tactical plan than the one favored by right-to-life litigators.

From Slate • Jun. 23, 2022

A right-to-life group found Rogers a lawyer, John Kiyonaga, who wanted her to ask Orellana Garcia what he wanted.

From Washington Post • Jan. 18, 2021

Both the medical and economic arguments for euthanasia are rejected by the powerful right-to-life movement, which commands hundreds of thousands of supporters nationwide.

From Time Magazine Archive