🧩 1. Core Meaning

Both mean not wrong, but:

Right → emphasizes truth, morality, or appropriateness.

Correct → emphasizes accuracy or precision according to rules or facts.


🧠 2. Nuance and Tone

Aspect Right Correct
Focus Moral, logical, or socially acceptable Factual, rule-based, or technical accuracy
Tone More common, natural, and emotional More formal, objective, and academic
Use in speech Everyday situations Exams, data, or formal feedback

💬 3. Examples

✅ Right

You did the right thing.
morally good action

Turn right at the signal.
directional

Are you right about that?
opinion, belief

That doesn’t feel right.
intuition, sense of wrongness

✅ Correct

Your answer is correct.
factually accurate

Please correct your spelling mistakes.
follow the rule

The correct temperature is 37°C.
precise value

Her behavior was grammatically correct, but not polite.
rule-based


⚖️ 4. Overlap

Sometimes both can work, but the feeling changes:

“You are right.” → I agree with your opinion or judgment.

“You are correct.” → Your information or answer is accurate.

In short:

Right = moral, emotional, or social accuracy.
Correct = factual, logical, or grammatical accuracy.


🗣️ 5. Quick Examples Side-by-Side

Sentence Preferred Word Why
That’s the ___ answer. correct It’s about accuracy.
You were ___ to help him. right It’s about morality.
The data is ___. correct Technical context.
You guessed ___! right Everyday speech.
It doesn’t feel ___. right Emotional judgment.