Spyke
LemmyLeftyreply
lemmy.world

A shrug and a “pretty good” = acceptable, not worth complaining about.

A slow grin first or it being said loudly = better than good, great.

Although this depends on how emotive the speaker is.

21

if someone shrugs with pretty good

or shrugs with good

to me the former is still better than the latter.

I don't see a way for pretty good to mean less than good

1
lemmy.world

My Bad-to-Good spectrum would be:

Bad

Pretty bad

Fairly bad

Fairly good

Pretty good

Good

28
pturn1reply
lemmy.world

"It's not bad, but it's still pretty bad" is a phrase I can see myself saying. Not sure about the other way round - doesn't really work for me, but to each their own...

5
canreply
sh.itjust.works

I see it as similar to "very bad", which would be worse than just "bad".

3

I have to say my bad-to-good ratio is probably:

Pretty bad

Bad

Not good

Ok <- Neutral

Not bad

Pretty good

Good

Which I now realize is a little weird to have "ok" be neutral, with not bad/good on either side of it.

5

Ha, exactly.

Not many options for a little less than good without people getting offended.

"Kinda good" or "almost good" definitely would upset people.

2

it can mean "decent, better than I expected"

or

"good, but not exceptional or memorable"

12

Neither, really. I use it to mean "more than expected". Like, if my kids insist I watch a cartoon with them, and I enjoy it, i'd say it's "pretty good". Or if a coworker said something awful about a customer, I might say the comment was "pretty mean".

10

I think it depends on what expectations were.

You and your friends make a horror movie and it's better than you thought: Hey, that's pretty good.

Steven Spielberg makes a mediocre horror movie: It was pretty good.

7

I think I use 'pretty good' to pretend I have an opinion about something, rather than it being a moral judgement:

How was the film? Pretty good vs.
How was the film? Good.

6

I see “pretty good” to be better than just “good”. It seems obvious to me, considering one is only good but the other is pretty good.

5

I can't imagine how "pretty good" could mean "better than good." Most of the examples posted here are talking about how something relates to your expectations, but that's not the question. Yes, "pretty good" is often used to describe something that is better than expected, but that doesn't make it better than "good."

For example, it doesn't make sense to say "$50 is good, but $100 is pretty good!"

I do think "pretty good" is often used as an understated way to say that something is very good, e.g. "Yeah, Messi is pretty good at soccer." However, that's a play on the actual meaning of the phrase, and should not be construed as the actual meaning.

5
lemmy.world

Intonation can carry the meaning.

In the UK, pretty good can mean anything from "not as bad as I thought it would be" to just "OK" or "pretty good! :D"

5

I always thought pretty good was better than good. Honestly surprised to find out I may have been wrong my entire life.

4
lemm.ee

Not necessarily worse, but more ambiguous than if I say something is good.

3

Yea for me "pretty good" is an estimate around good. Like using -ish. I don't want to say it was good but it was around good.

2

Good

Pretty good

Really/Very good

Extremely good

Great

Pretty great

Really/very great

Extremely great

Awesome

...

3

I learned about it the other day. Apparently native English speakers know than non native use it in a more positive way then they do

2

Worse. Sometimes just a little worse than good, sometimes it's medium or negative but you're just trying to be nice. "How did you like the liver and onions I cooked for you?". "It was pretty good."

2

Generally, for me, it means something less than entirely "good."

The times I'm most likely to use it are when I'm finding minor fault with something - "Well... it was pretty good, but..." or when something is better than I expected, but not quite fully good - "Hey! That was actually pretty good!"

1

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