Interpretation of the correct meaning:
(1) power, goods and wealth
"Xunzi's exhortation to learn": "A gentleman knows that his husband is incomplete and not good enough, and thinks that beauty is also ... so the rights cannot be reversed and the masses cannot move."
"The Biography of Dong Zhuochuan in the Later Han Dynasty": "A small struggle for power will kill more."
Fang Xiaoru's "Ho Choi" in the Ming Dynasty: "Abandoning 30,000 households and not accepting them, resigning without living, can be described as no desire."
(2) legal terms.
Refers to the rights and interests that citizens should enjoy according to law, or the rights and interests that the subjects of legal relations independently enjoy to meet their specific interests within the scope prescribed by law. Right is a legal concept, which generally refers to the rights and interests granted to people, that is, the right to safeguard their own interests. It shows that citizens with rights have the right to do certain behaviors and ask others to do corresponding behaviors.
Right: refers to the power given to people by law to realize interests. Corresponding to obligation is one of the basic categories of law, the core word of human rights concept and the key word of legal norms. The most extensive and practical content implied or expressed in family, society, country and international relations. From the usual point of view, right is the permission, recognition and guarantee given by law to the subject of right to act or not to act.
Rights usually include power and interests. Power refers to the possibility that the right can be realized, and does not require the absolute realization of the right, but only shows that the right has the realistic possibility of realization; Interest is another main manifestation of rights and the result of the realization of power. Power is possible and interests are realistic. It can also be said that power is a realizable but unrealized benefit; Interest is the power of realization. Therefore, rights can be divided into natural rights and actual rights.
Hu Shi's Introduction to Chinese Grammar: "In recent twenty years, education has become everyone's right and everyone's obligation."
Lao She's Four Generations under One Family XIV: "He feels that since he has never failed anyone, he should enjoy this right of peace and happiness."
Ding Weiliang (W.A.P.Martin) The Law of Nations: "Emoko's right to use the country is based on public discussion."