-2

I'm learning how to describe a map. How can I call its "right-center" part?

  1. The shop is in the right-center section of the area.
  2. The shop is in the right-central section of the area.
  3. The shop is in the center-right section of the area.
  4. The shop is in the middle-right section of the area.

.....

Feel free to suggest any way to describe it better. Thank you!

1 Answer 1

1

The most natural-sounding way to describe such things is using center-right.

That’s the same construction used to describe political positions, based on the left-right metaphor. Consider Today’s Republican Party in Congress retains nearly nobody from the traditional center right that was so strong throughout the mid-twentieth century.

3
  • 1
    …and although you do include that one in your title, it’s absent from the body of your post. You may wish to edit to add it. Commented 11 hours ago
  • Can I remove "section", just "the center-right of the area"? Commented 11 hours ago
  • @AnIELTSLearner Yes. "in" implies that you're describing a section.
    – Barmar
    Commented 6 hours ago

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .