rough and ready
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See also: rough-and-ready
English
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Adjective
[edit]rough and ready (comparative more rough and ready, superlative most rough and ready)
- (idiomatic, often hyphenated when placed immediately before the modified noun) Crude or unpolished, but still fit for use; good enough.
- 1849, James Fenimore Cooper, chapter 15, in The Sea Lions:
- [A] dozen Americans could, at any time, construct a house, the ‘rough and ready’ habits of the people usually teaching them, in a rude way, a good deal of a great many other arts, besides this of the carpenter.
- 1873–1884 (date written), Samuel Butler, chapter LXV, in R[ichard] A[lexander] Streatfeild, editor, The Way of All Flesh, London: Grant Richards, published 1903, →OCLC, page 291:
- There was a rough and ready rule-of-thumb test of truth […]
- 1996 December 4, Roderick Conway Morris, “10 Years of Enlightenment: An Unusual Orchestra Celebrates”, in New York Times, retrieved 4 June 2014:
- "Things were a lot more rough and ready, but there was a kind of raw beauty about it."
- 2004 November 8, Michael D. Lemonick, Bryan Walsh, “How We Grew So Big”, in Time, retrieved 4 June 2014:
- Doctors define overweight and obesity by a rough-and-ready measurement called the body mass index (BMI).