averagely
averagely — adverb
1. to a degree that is neither very high nor very low — at the level that most peop
to a degree that is neither very high nor very low — at the level that most people would consider normal or usual in a given situation.
Meera's test scores were averagely good, falling right in the middle of the class.
averagely good — modifies a quality adjective
The hotel room was averagely clean — not dirty, but not spotless either.
Hao performed averagely well in the interview, neither impressing nor disappointing the panel.
The documentary about deep-sea fishing was averagely entertaining, with good footage but a slow middle section.
Eliska rated the restaurant lunch as averagely priced at around eighty dollars for two.
- moderately
focuses on avoidance of extremes; slightly more common in everyday speech
- fairly
softer and more conversational; suggests a degree that is satisfactory but not outstanding
- reasonably
suggests adequacy or acceptability, not just a statistical midpoint
- ordinarily
emphasises what is typical or expected rather than the middle of a scale
- extremely
at the highest possible degree, not a middle point
- exceptionally
far above what is normal or typical
- remarkably
in a way that attracts attention because it is unusual
文法句型
averagely + adjective
averagely + past participle
用法筆記
Averagely is far less common than the adjective 'average'. It is almost always used before an adjective or past participle that describes a quality or result — for example, 'averagely successful', 'averagely talented', 'averagely dressed'. You would not normally use it at the start of a sentence or after a verb without a following modifier.