The difference between Mediocre and Odd
When used as nouns, mediocre means a person of minor significance, accomplishment or acclaim, whereas odd means an .
When used as adjectives, mediocre means having no peculiar or outstanding features, whereas odd means single.
check bellow for the other definitions of Mediocre and Odd
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Mediocre as an adjective:
Having no peculiar or outstanding features; not extraordinary, special, exceptional, or great; of medium quality.
Examples:
"I'm pretty good at tennis but only mediocre at racquetball."
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Mediocre as a noun:
A person of minor significance, accomplishment or acclaim; a common and undistinguished person.
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Mediocre as a noun (historical):
A member of a socioeconomic class between the upper ranks of society and the agricultural workers.
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Odd as an adjective (not comparable):
Single; sole; singular; not having a mate.
Examples:
"Optimistically, he had a corner of a drawer for odd socks."
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Odd as an adjective (obsolete):
Singular in excellence; unique; sole; matchless; peerless; famous.
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Odd as an adjective:
Singular in looks or character; peculiar; eccentric.
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Odd as an adjective:
Strange, unusual.
Examples:
"She slept in, which was very odd."
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Odd as an adjective (not comparable):
Occasional; infrequent.
Examples:
"but for the odd exception"
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Odd as an adjective (not comparable):
Left over, remaining when the rest have been grouped.
Examples:
"I'm the odd one out."
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Odd as an adjective (not comparable):
Casual, irregular, not planned.
Examples:
"He's only worked odd jobs."
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Odd as an adjective (not comparable, in combination with a number):
About, approximately.
Examples:
"There were thirty-odd people in the room."
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Odd as an adjective (not comparable):
Indivisible by two; not even.
Examples:
"The product of odd numbers is also odd."
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Odd as an adjective:
Sporadic; scattered in frequency; occurring randomly
Examples:
"I don't speak Latin well, so in hearing a dissertation in Latin, I would only be able to make out the odd word of it."
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Odd as an adjective (sports):
On the left.
Examples:
"He served from the odd court. "
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Odd as a noun (mathematics, diminutive):
An .
Examples:
"So let's see. There are two evens here and three odds."
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Odd as a noun (colloquial):
Something left over, not forming part of a set.
Examples:
"I've got three complete sets of these [[trading card]]s for sale, plus a few dozen odds."
Compare words:
Compare with synonyms and related words:
- common vs mediocre
- commonplace vs mediocre
- mediocre vs ordinary
- great vs mediocre
- distinguished vs mediocre
- exceptional vs mediocre
- mediocre vs outstanding
- mediocre vs remarkable
- mediocre vs peculiar
- excellent vs mediocre
- great vs mediocre
- odd vs single
- mismatched vs odd
- bizarre vs odd
- odd vs peculiar
- odd vs queer
- odd vs rum
- odd vs strange
- odd vs uncommon
- odd vs unusual
- odd vs weird
- fremd vs odd
- common vs odd
- familiar vs odd
- mediocre vs odd
- about vs odd
- approximately vs odd
- around vs odd
- even vs odd