The word "mediocre" originates from the Latin "mediocris," which means "moderate" or "ordinary." This Latin term is derived from "medius," meaning "middle" or "midway." It entered the English language in the late 15th century, initially carrying the connotation of being of average quality, and has since developed a somewhat negative implication, suggesting inferiority or lack of distinction.
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Etymology A+ users
Etymology is leader of the people
The term is etymology.
Etymology. The study of words and their origins.
you are a mediocre person because you never finish anything
A mis-spelling of mediocre
Mediocre qualities are average or commonplace.
Mediocre is not a verb. It's an adjective.
A mediocre grade is one that is barely passable.
Mediocre - album - was created in 2007.
The etymology of etymology is from the greek etumologia which means "true sense of a word"
Mediocre work is sub-standard. It is better to strive to do an excellent job than to do a mediocre job.
Mediocre Generica was created on 2001-09-11.
Mediocre (middling, undistinguished) and average (not high or low) are synonyms.However, the modern use of mediocre has a negative connotation that average does not.
My answer to this question is mediocre, it answers the question but isn't that great.
I was extremely disappointed when the gourmet meal I spent the day making turned out to be only mediocre. After a summer with a math tutor, my son's math grades went mediocre to marvelous. Lacey entered the competition with high hopes only to finish with a mediocre score.