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goodish
adjective
Rather good than the contrary; not actually bad; tolerable.
Exact(47)
Savvy buyers should be able to find goodish debts at reasonable prices but also plenty of assets beyond salvation.
Its economy is growing at a steady pace (about 3% next year is the latest guess) with a goodish spread of high-tech and service industries, especially in media and telecoms.
Up (or down) late Uncle Sam goes shopping On a knife-edge Birds of a feather ReprintsSo far, so good or rather goodish.
That allowed the fierce spending and tax cuts that began to transform Ireland from a banana republic into a "Celtic Tiger".But Mr Haughey had little time to enjoy the fruits of this rare period of goodish government.
I'm bound to admit I was appalled to a goodish extent at the way the sons and daughters of the Revolution shoved their heads down and went for the foodstuffs.
Mr Rutelli, the opposition's failed prime-ministerial candidate in May, had previously been a goodish mayor of Rome.
Similar(5)
I know it sounds sappy and do-goodish and earnest.
Remember those numerous Vietnam films in the 80s where the casting director seemed to have said: "Let's get eight goodish-looking young men in the same squad, who look identical.
VSZ accounted for 10-20% of Slovak exports in the 1990s and the plant still accounts for 15% of Slovak GDP, says John Goodish, the newly appointed head of the business.
John Goodish, president of U.S. Steel Kosice, a factory that the American steel maker bought three years ago in Slovakia and that is now United States Steel's only profitable major unit, said United States Steel was equally determined to win PHS's five mills.
"If you talk about consolidation of the steel industry in the U.S., you are talking about cuts," said John Goodish, who will be chief executive of U.S. Steel Kosice.
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