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Discover Ludwig"more mediocre" is a correct and usable term in written English.
You can use this term to describe something that is not great but not horrible either; something that is average or only slightly above average. For example, "The food served at the restaurant was more mediocre than I had expected."
Exact(48)
And that's why films are much more mediocre, because time no longer exists".
"Fujimori was quite different to Trujillo - a more mediocre tyrant," he says.
"If these two women had been more mediocre, maybe they would have had an easier time," Ms. Cho said.
Who needs to read one more mediocre book?" Roth said that he saw nothing strange in retiring from literature.
Cyclists are paid by the day, lowest rate being $50. for the more mediocre, $200 to $300.
Of the movie roles he did play, he told The New York Times in 1972, "Nobody made more mediocre films than I did".
Similar(12)
They're getting more consistently mediocre.
Their efforts, unfortunately, are not enough to make "The Break-Up" memorable, or anything more than mediocre.
His own dramatic efforts (e.g., Sterbender Cato [1732; "The Dying Cato"]), however, are considered to be little more than mediocre tragedies in the classical style.
They are the titular tumblers in Tom Stoppard's "Jumpers," an esoteric circus of a play that features more purposely mediocre acrobats than any other show on Broadway.
I could have stuck it out, and practised eight hours a day, but I withdrew as I could not settle for being no more than mediocre".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com