What is a nicer word for mean

I’m looking for a word that I learned when studying for the CLEP analysing and interpreting literature exam. It is a word that means -‘a more eloquent version of a harsher word.

Example: saying, ‘expecting’ instead of ‘pregnant’

asked Apr 10, 2016 at 6:32

Rivka's user avatar

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Euphemism: «a mild or indirect word or expression substituted for one considered to be too harsh or blunt when referring to something unpleasant or embarrassing.» Google euphemism

Euphemism: «the substitution of an agreeable or inoffensive expression for one that may offend or suggest something unpleasant»

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/euphemism

answered Apr 10, 2016 at 6:36

Cathy Gartaganis's user avatar

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Subjects>Arts & Humanities>English Language Arts

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∙ 12y ago


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Of course it is :)

It’s nice — nicer — nicest.

And remember — there’s no such thing as a «real word.» If a word
is used and people understand it, then it is just as «real» as any
word in any dictionary, or any word approved by your English
teacher! How else would new words be invented?

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Q: Is the word nicer a real word?

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Continue Learning about English Language Arts

Nicer is there such a word?

Yes.
«She is nicer than he is.»


Is smart or nicer a better word?

I think smart is a better word because you have to be nice to be
smart and u have to be good at problem solving


What is a sentence with the word prevaricate in it?

I went to a shop and there was a dress i liked ,but then i was another that looked even nicer and I prevaricated.


Is tyrotoxism a real word?

yes it is a real word


Why is their no buyed in the language?

The past tense of the word buy is bought, which I have to say
sounds much nicer than buyed.

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Adjective



I hope you all had a nice time.



It’s so nice to see you again.



It’s nice to be back home.



It’s nice to know that you’re all right.



It would be nice to try something different.



We had a very nice dinner.



“Hello, my name is Sara.” “It’s nice to meet you, Sara.”



It’s nice to see you, Luis. How have you been?



She wears the nicest clothes.



He looks nice in his new suit.

See More

Recent Examples on the Web



But getting that next reliable wave would be nice, too.


Nick Piecoro, The Arizona Republic, 6 Apr. 2023





The zipper is very nice and helps make the jacket look like a higher-end piece.


Gabrielle Porcaro, Travel + Leisure, 4 Apr. 2023





The living quarters also feature lofty, eight-foot-high ceilings that create a nice and breezy feel throughout.


Rachel Cormack, Robb Report, 3 Apr. 2023





Some of those people are probably nice and dateable.


Meredith Goldstein, BostonGlobe.com, 2 Apr. 2023





Cake and cookies came out evenly browned and had a fine texture with few air pockets, meanwhile broccoli came out nice and consistently crisp, too.


Good Housekeeping, 31 Mar. 2023





Yes Adding powder to smoothies is nice and all, but this one can be baked into peanut butter bars or even tossed into a tomato sauce.


Jasmine Gomez, Women’s Health, 31 Mar. 2023





Your forearms should be nice and tall and your elbow up against your rib cage.


Jeff Tomko, Men’s Health, 31 Mar. 2023





The video is stylized and slick, with some very nice luggage on display.


Emily Zemler, Rolling Stone, 31 Mar. 2023




The Terran 1 rocket sure cleans up nice.


Eric Berger, Ars Technica, 24 Mar. 2023





The concept is simple: Each episode is an in-depth journey on a notable train somewhere around the world, with likable and very-earnestly-excited-about-trains-but-in-a-nice-calming-way host Teddy Wilson acting as a tour guide and pal throughout each trip.


Vulture Editors, Vulture, 11 Nov. 2022





Ryan Reynolds cleans up nice, to say the least.


Lydia Price, Peoplemag, 7 Nov. 2022





The other nice-yielding REIT making 52-week highs of late is outlet mall giant Tanger Factory Outlet (SKT, 4.6% yield).


Brett Owens, Forbes, 12 Feb. 2023





Why does this perfectly nice-seeming man never get a line, let alone a storyline?


Emma Specter, Vogue, 28 Nov. 2022





Amazon has instead offered up a steady stream of nice-sounding anecdotes about plastic use that don’t add up to much.


Matt Littlejohn, Fortune, 16 June 2022





Irish Spring featured a somewhat strange gathering of nice-smelling people on an island.


Tim Calkins For Cnn Business Perspectives, CNN, 14 Feb. 2022





Most of them are feeding off a neither-candidate-is-good-enough syndrome that makes people vote for mystery men and women who come attached to a nice-sounding party label.


Gail Collins New York Times, Star Tribune, 17 Sep. 2020



See More

These examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word ‘nice.’ Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

WikipediaRate this definition:0.0 / 0 votes

  1. Nicer

    Nicer (19 March 1990 – after 2012) was an Irish-bred, British-trained Thoroughbred racehorse and broodmare. She showed promise as a two-year-old in 1992 although she won only one minor race from five attempts. She reached her peak in the following spring when she won the Masaka Stakes before recording her biggest victory in the Irish 1000 Guineas. She was beaten in her next four races and was then exported to the United States where she failed to win. She was retired to become a broodmare but her foals made very little impact on the racecourse.

How to pronounce Nicer?

How to say Nicer in sign language?

Numerology

  1. Chaldean Numerology

    The numerical value of Nicer in Chaldean Numerology is: 7

  2. Pythagorean Numerology

    The numerical value of Nicer in Pythagorean Numerology is: 4

Examples of Nicer in a Sentence

  1. Donald TrumpPresident Trump:

    I hate it, I meet these people, they call it the elite, we got more money, we got more brains, we got better houses and apartments, we got nicer boats, we’re smarter than they are and they say they’re the elite. You’re the elite, we’re the elite.

  2. Matt Kuchar:

    The streaky way is stressful, the golf I play… you could watch me play a round of golf and it’s pretty stress free. I don’t do any crazy things. I don’t make a ton of birdies, but I don’t make a lot of bogeys, either. It’s been a lot nicer the last five or six years.

  3. Kilian Jornet:

    The second time I was feeling better, i had no stomach problems and the weather was much nicer.

  4. Jae Kaplan:

    Something that we’ve heard a lot from people who are moving over from Twitter, either partially or fully, is that it is just for them a nicer experience overall.

  5. James Henning:

    An exoneration couldn’t have happened to a nicer man, if what was known about the evidence now were known at the time of trial, [Roman] would have been acquitted.

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Are we missing a good definition for Nicer? Don’t keep it to yourself…

WATCH: What’s So Wrong With «Nice»?

What’s the origin of nice?

Nice, it turns out, began as a negative term derived from the Latin nescius, meaning “unaware, ignorant.” This sense of “ignorant” was carried over into English when the word was first borrowed (via French) in the early 1300s. And for almost a century, nice was used to characterize a “stupid, ignorant, or foolish” person.

Starting in the late 1300s, nice began to refer to “conduct, a person, or clothing that was considered excessively luxurious or lascivious.” However, by the 1400s a new, more neutral sense of nice was emerging. At this time, nice began to refer to “a person who was finely dressed, someone who was scrupulous, or something that was precise or fussy.”

By the late 1500s, nice was further softening, describing something as “refined, culture,” especially used of polite society.

The high value placed on being coy, delicate, and reserved was instrumental in the semantic amelioration of the term nice in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

Jane Austen, for instance, mocked this now-positive term in Northanger Abbey (1817) when Henry Tilney teases the naive Catherine Morland for her overuse of nice. He jokes: “… and this is a very nice day, and we are taking a very nice walk, and you are two very nice young ladies. Oh, it is a very nice word, indeed!—it does for everything.”

What’s the origin of the phrase nice guy?

Over 200 years later, nice still “does (the job) for everything.” It’s a catch-all word for someone or something “pleasant” or “agreeable.”

But, in the popular dating culture, the nice guy has become anything but. In fact, it seems nice, harkening back to its root, is becoming a not-so-nice word again. As found on internet forums as early as the 1980s, romantically unsuccessful men have identified as the niceguy, always losing out to their nemesis: the bad boy.

This dating nice guy apparently draws on earlier constructions of nice guy. Predated by nice fellow in the 1800s, the phrase nice guy is found in the written record in the early 1900s.

The expression nice guys finish last—agreeable people who get overpowered by their more assertive counterparts—is credited to Brooklyn Dodgers manager Leo Durocher in 1946.Nice guy also makes an appearance in no more Mr. Nice Guy, said when someone is throwing down—and implying nice guys are soft and weak. Alice Cooper rocked the saying in his 1973 track “No More Mr. Nice Guy.” A reporter memorably asked it of Richard Nixon about the Vietnam War in 1977.

The language of a nice guy

You’ve likely heard—or maybe even used—the expression he’s a nice guy, but … People may use this phrase as a polite way to decline a potential male partner, whether because they aren’t interested in him or personally don’t find him attractive in some way.

In the 2000s on some feminist spaces on the internet, nice guy started to more specifically refer to an insecure man who expects his kindness to be rewarded with sex. At least that’s in part how the website Heartless Bitches International saw it in their noted 2002 denunciation against the nice guy. This piece helped influence Nice Guy™ and Nice Guy Syndrome, terms for men who think being nice alone entitles them sex.

In current usage, it’s not uncommon to see some so-called nice guys throwing around the term friend-zone. A person (usually a guy) can be put in the friend-zone or be friend-zoned when someone he is interested in dating views him as just a friend. While friend-zone can be used in a neutral way, it is often used in an entitled way to question why a person always chooses the “nice guy” last.

Does this mean no more Mr. Nice Guy?

Of course, the term nice guy can still be used non-ironically to refer to a genuinely nice dude, e.g., “Your dad is such a nice guy!” However, it’s important to keep tone in mind as you come across the term nice guy on the internet, especially if it appears in quotes.

As a 2012 piece in Jezebel reminds us: “… rule number one of being a real nice guy is that you never, ever refer to yourself as a ‘nice guy.’”

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