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Answer for the clue "___ to middling (just so-so) ", 4 letters:
fair

Alternative clues for the word fair

Word definitions for fair in dictionaries

The Collaborative International Dictionary Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Fair \Fair\ (f[^a]r), a. [Compar. Fairer ; superl. Fairest .] [OE. fair, fayer, fager, AS. f[ae]ger; akin to OS. & OHG. fagar, Icel. fagr, Sw. fager, Dan. faver, Goth. fagrs fit, also to E. fay, G. f["u]gen, to fit. fegen to sweep, cleanse, and prob. also ...

Usage examples of fair.

And the ceiling fair that rose aboon The white and feathery fleece of noon.

Fair with my friend Patu, who, taking it into his head to sup with a Flemish actress known by the name of Morphi, invited me to go with him.

Lincoln defended himself with fair and full statements of fact, and was apparently justified in adopting the policy he had chosen.

I have not the slightest pretence to virtue, but I adore the fair sex, and now you and they know the road to my purse.

At this point Adam saw his way sufficiently clear to adumbrate to Davenport with fair exactness what he wished hime to find out.

They learned later that the girl had taken frequent flights in the South, where her father had, for a time, entered into the business of giving aeroplane flights for money at county fairs and the like.

Running to the window they saw the Mortlake aeroplane whiz by at a fair height.

Elf-lords would ride at times, even from afar, for the land was wild but very fair.

Tiriki scampered into the room, her silky fair hair all aflutter about the elfin face, her small tunic torn, one pink foot sandalled and the other bare, whose rapid uneven steps bore her swiftly to Domaris.

The fairing for the towed array extended longitudinally aft from the leading edge of the sail to the stern.

Fathom, believing that now was the season for working upon her passions, while they were all in commotion, became, if possible, more assiduous than ever about the fair mourner, modelled his features into a melancholy cast, pretended to share her distress with the most emphatic sympathy, and endeavoured to keep her resentment glowing by cunning insinuations, which, though apparently designed to apologise for his friend, served only to aggravate the guilt of his perfidy and dishonour.

Juss, enforcing his half frozen limbs to resume the ascent, beheld a sight of woe too terrible for the eye: a young man, helmed and graithed in dark iron, a black-a-moor with goggle-eyes and white teeth agrin, who held by the neck a fair young lady kneeling on her knees and clasping his as in supplication, and he most bloodily brandishing aloft his spear of six foot of length as minded to reave her of her life.

He could not see the pilot, but he had a fair idea where the man would be huddled on the floor, and he was just aiming at that part of the floor when the helicopter veered sharply up the cliff.

One lucky person will receive the alexandrite, but in order to be fair to all, no one must mention the rare gem.

In these letters he founded his allegation, that Ireland had not her fair proportion of members of the house of commons, on this data.