DECENT


Meaning of DECENT in English

de ‧ cent S3 /ˈdiːs ə nt/ BrE AmE adjective

[ Date: 1500-1600 ; Language: French ; Origin: décent , from Latin decens , the present participle of decere 'to be suitable' ]

1 . [usually before noun] of a good enough standard or quality:

a decent salary

Don’t you have a decent jacket?

a house with a decent-sized yard

Their in-flight magazine is halfway decent (=quite good) .

2 . following moral standards that are acceptable to society ⇨ decency

decent citizens/people/folk etc

The majority of residents here are decent citizens.

a decent burial

Paul visited the local bars more frequently than was decent for a senior lecturer.

The chairman did the decent thing (=did what people thought he ought to) and resigned.

3 . [usually before noun] treating people in a fair and kind way:

I decided her father was a decent guy after all.

It was decent of you to show up today.

4 . wearing enough clothes so that you do not show too much of your body – used humorously:

Are you decent? Can I come in?

—decently adverb

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THESAURUS

▪ satisfactory good enough – often used when something reaches a fairly good standard, but is not of a high standard:

Her grades are satisfactory.

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For a beginner, this camera produces satisfactory results.

▪ all right/OK spoken not bad, but not very good:

The meal was all right, but rather expensive.

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‘How was the film?’ ‘It was OK.’

▪ reasonable fairly good:

a reasonable standard of living

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The quality of the food was reasonable.

▪ acceptable if something is acceptable to you, you think it is good enough and you are willing to take it:

an acceptable offer

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an acceptable level of risk

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They can't find a solution that is acceptable to both sides.

▪ adequate enough in quantity, or of a good enough standard. Adequate sounds rather formal and is used especially in official contexts:

an adequate supply of drinking water

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adequate standards of hygiene

▪ decent especially spoken good enough in quality – used especially when something is as good as most other things:

I want my kids to get a decent education.

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Where can I get a decent cup of coffee?

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The food’s decent and the service is good.

▪ passable satisfactory, but not of the best quality – used especially about food and drink, or someone’s skill at doing something. Passable sounds rather formal:

a passable French wine

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His Japanese was passable.

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a passable imitation of Barack Obama

▪ be up to scratch informal to be of a good enough standard:

His work wasn’t up to scratch.

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None of the hotels they suggested were up to scratch.

▪ will do informal to be good enough for a particular purpose:

Any kind of paper will do.

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‘How about Ken?’ ‘I suppose he’ll do.’

Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English.      Longman - Словарь современного английского языка.