MEDIOCRE vs BAD: NOUN
- One of middling quality, talents, or merit.
- A monk between twenty-four and forty years of age, who was excused from the office of the chantry and from reading the epistle and gospel, but performed his duty in choir, cloister, and refectory.
- A mediocre person; a mediocrity.
- A young monk who was excused from performing a portion of a monk's duties.
- That which is bad. A bad condition: as, to go to the bad (see below). A bad thing: as, there are bads and goods among them.
- Preterit of bid.
- That which is below standard or expectations as of ethics or decency
MEDIOCRE vs BAD: ADJECTIVE
- Moderate to inferior in quality
- Of no exceptional quality or ability
- Of ordinary or undistinguished quality. : average.
- Of a middle quality; of but a moderate or low degree of excellence; indifferent; ordinary.
- Lacking exceptional quality or ability
- Ordinary: not extraordinary; not special, exceptional, or great; of medium quality;
- Poor to middling in quality
- Not working properly
- Having undesirable or negative qualities
- Characterized by wickedness or immorality
- Keenly sorry or regretful
- Capable of harming
- Physically unsound or diseased
- Not achieving an adequate standard; poor.
- Immoral or evil.
- Vulgar or obscene.
- Disobedient or naughty.
- Disagreeable, unpleasant, or disturbing.
- Unfavorable.
- Not fresh; rotten or spoiled.
- Reproduced fraudulently
- Not working properly; defective.
- (of foodstuffs) not in an edible or usable condition
- Feeling physical discomfort or pain (`tough' is occasionally used colloquially for `bad')
- Not capable of being collected
- Below average in quality or performance
- Nonstandard
- Not financially safe or secure
- Very intense
- Injurious in effect; detrimental.
- Malodorous, foul.
- Spoiled, rotten, overripe.
- Faulty; not functional.
- Evil; wicked.
- Tricky; stressful; unpleasant.
- Not suitable or fitting.
- Seemingly non-appropriate, in manners, etc.
- Not good; unfavorable; negative.
- This sense?) (slang) Fantastic.
- Wanting good qualities, whether physical or moral; injurious, hurtful, inconvenient, offensive, painful, unfavorable, or defective, either physically or morally; evil; vicious; wicked; -- the opposite of good.
- Sorry; regretful.
- Very good; great.
- Severe; intense.
- Being so far behind in repayment as to be considered a loss.
- Being in poor health or in pain.
- Being in poor condition; diseased.
- Full of or exhibiting faults or errors.
- Having no validity; void.
MEDIOCRE vs BAD: VERB
- N/A
- To shell (a walnut).
- Alternative past tense of bid. See bade.
MEDIOCRE vs BAD: ADVERB
- N/A
- Very much; strongly
- With great intensity (`bad' is a nonstandard variant for `badly')
- Badly.
MEDIOCRE vs BAD: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Of moderate degree or quality; middling; indifferent; ordinary.
- Evil; ill; vicious; wicked; depraved: applied to persons, conduct, character, influence, etc.: as, a bad man; bad conduct; a bad life; a bad heart; bad influence, etc.
- Offensive; disagreeable; troublesome; painful; grievous: as, bad treatment; a bad temper; it is too bad that you had to wait so long.
- Hurtful; noxious; having an injurious or unfavorable tendency or effect: with for: as, bad air or bad food; late hours are bad for the health; this step would be bad for your reputation or prospects.
- Ill; in ill health; sick; in unsound condition: as, to feel bad; to be bad with rheumatism; a bad hand or leg.
- Not good; defective; worthless; poor; of no value: as, bad coin; bad debts; a bad soil; a bad crop; a bad piece of work; bad health.
- Incorrect; faulty: as, a bad aim; bad English; a bad pronunciation.
- Not valid; not sound: as, a bad claim; a bad plea.
- Unfavorable; unfortunate: as, bad news; bad success.
- [Bad is the ordinary antithesis of good, in all its senses, whether positively, ‘evil,’ ‘harmful,’ or negatively, ‘not good,’ ‘not satisfactory,’ and whether substantively, ‘being evil,’ or causally, ‘causing harm.’ The senses run into one another, the precise application being determined by the context.]
- Strongly
- Very much
- Feeling or expressing regret or sorrow or a sense of loss over something done or undone
- Serious or severe
- (idiom) (that's too bad) Used in response to a protest or complaint to express insistence that the speaker's expectation be met.
- (idiom) (that's too bad) Used to express sadness or sympathy.
- (idiom) (half/so) Reasonably good.
- (idiom) (my bad) Used to acknowledge that one is at fault.
- (idiom) (in bad) In trouble or disfavor.
- (imperative) Bade.
MEDIOCRE vs BAD: RELATED WORDS
- Shoddy, Indifferent, Pathetic, Pitiful, Dismal, Lackluster, Unimpressive, Second rate, Fair, Ordinary, Average, Bad, Poor, Inferior, Middling
- Sad, Wicked, Negative, Mediocre, Tough, Shitty, Atrocious, Rotten, Poor, Crappy, Dreadful, Awful, Horrid, Lousy, Terrible
MEDIOCRE vs BAD: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Shoddy, Indifferent, Pathetic, Pitiful, Dismal, Lackluster, Unimpressive, Second rate, Fair, Ordinary, Average, Bad, Poor, Inferior, Middling
- Sad, Wicked, Negative, Mediocre, Tough, Shitty, Atrocious, Rotten, Poor, Crappy, Dreadful, Awful, Horrid, Lousy, Terrible
MEDIOCRE vs BAD: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Pretty mediocre by any standards and trending worse.
- If you are going to put in a mediocre effort, you are going to get a mediocre result.
- An excellent writer can elevate a mediocre storyline, and a mediocre writer can drag down a powerful storyline.
- Some games are mediocre with great dungeons whereas others are great with mediocre ones.
- Customer feedback questions to include in a survey basics to include tested, but mediocre questions yield mediocre.
- And functionality but mediocre questions yield mediocre answers you look up to in this business cupcake business ca be.
- You get a mediocre TV and a mediocre DVD player.
- They all also have quality issues as there just kinda mediocre made keyboards with mediocre internal components.
- Among these mediocre minds and their mediocre truths, Nietzsthe broad fascination that characterized theory of natural selection.
- "Mediocre coach for a mediocre team," wrote one blogger succinctly when the news broke.
- Office Bad Check Restitution Program to assist local merchants with bad check losses.
- Goto is not bad, its how people use them that can be bad.
- These few bad actors are going to give us a bad name.
- Unbelievably bad service and bad faith demonstrated over a fraudulent charge.
- OK to put pictures on your resume is BAD, very bad.
- My view is that bad managers create bad employees.
- City Furniture for bad service, bad furniture, bad attention.
- It is bad for the user experience, bad for SEO, and bad for developers who have to maintain pages.
- Mere negligence or bad judgment is insufficient for a finding of bad faith, at least under the bad faith statute.
- Bad things happen in every society, and bad people often get away with doing bad things.
MEDIOCRE vs BAD: QUESTIONS
- Is it possible to be mediocre but change the world?
- Why do we think the fair maiden is mediocre looking?
- What's the most mediocre number in MTG deck building?
- What's wrong with being average or mediocre in life?
- Does traffic signal box public art need mediocre boxes?
- Were the Beatles really a band of mediocre musicians?
- Why did Madonna call Whitney Houston'horribly mediocre'?
- Why is Mekakucity Actors considered a mediocre anime?
- Why is credentialism so attractive to the mediocre?
- Are valedictorians more successful than mediocre students?
- Was target hiding bad news from vulnerable customers?
- Are exclamation marks bad in professional environments?
- Does overthinking prevent bad things from happening?
- Is polyethylene terephthalate bad for the environment?
- Are Bad Bunny and Gabriela from 'Bad Bunny' engaged?
- Is Bad Moon's transformation scene in American Werewolf in London bad?
- Is it easier to leave a bad spouse than a bad neighbor?
- How to prevent bad smell or bad taste from a new Kettle?
- Are bad debts still bad when you use cash accounting principles?
- Is Seven Samurai better than the Good Bad Bad and ugly?