inclined or disposed to please; obliging; agreeable or gracious; compliant
No, but sometimes "average" means "mean" - when it doesn't mean median, geometric mean, or something else entirely.
The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.The answer will depend on who you mean by HE.
See mean-8. Or get a dictionary.
There is no statistical term such as "deviation mean".
No, the geometric mean is not the same as the mean of two numbers.
The homophone for complacent is complaisant.
The word complaisant is an adjective. It means to be compliant.
Americans have become ignorant and complaisant, like cattle in for the slaughter.
the employee seems complaisant when his leave approved for 10 more days.
The animals were becoming complacent and jumpy.The woman was so complaisant that she was unable to deny a single request.
Un monsieur complaisant - 1907 was released on: France: 1907 USA: 25 January 1908
polite, friendly, generous, amiable
calm, complaisant, laid-back
Un jeune homme complaisant - 1911 was released on: France: 13 July 1911 USA: 28 August 1911
The opposite is complaisant
Characterized by courteousness, affability, or gentleness; of good appearance and manners; graceful; complaisant.
The difference is the complaisant means 'eager to please' and 'showing a cheerful willingness to fulfill others' wise'. Complacent is quite the opposite, "being pleased with oneself contented to a fault '. However, they share one meaning, which may cause them to be confused with each also carries the sense of 'obliging, agreeable'. One could differentiate the two words by saying that complaisant is the active adverb and complacent denotes a more passive feeling. Complaisant was first recorded in 1647, deriving from Latin complacere. Complacent comes from the same Latin word, but is not found in writing until 1660.