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The phrase "all that happy" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express a degree of happiness, often implying that the level of happiness is not as high as expected or desired.
Example: "She said she was all that happy about the promotion, but her expression told a different story."
Alternatives: "not that happy" or "not very happy".
Exact(57)
In any event, Quick isn't all that happy with the outcome of his lawsuit.
For all that, "Happy Days Are Here Again" is unlikely to become the official song of the Games.
But nor are the users of ratings all that happy, because the agencies are generally not very good at predicting default rates.
"On a moral or spiritual level, at some point you may discover you're not all that happy having more stuff or more travel.
Rodriguez might have figured something like that would not happen to him again this season, but now it has, and he was not all that happy about it.
My coach is not all that happy because in the end I didn't do what he wanted me to do - but I can work on that.
And Kevin Johnson, the N.B.A. star turned mayor of Sacramento, isn't all that happy with Seattle fans, who have been celebrating the thought that the Kings will relocate to that city.
People are generally not all that happy about risk.
Similar(3)
But when polka bands started popping up on either coast, all that happy-sounding accordion music became impossible to ignore.
The Olympics aren't only about harmony among nations, transcendent sportsmanship, urban image-building and all that happy-face multinational blah blah blah.
What if all that makes them happy?
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com