de·cent /ˈdisṇt/
  (a.)有分寸的,得體的,大方的
  de·cent a.
  1. Suitable in words, behavior, dress, or ceremony; becoming; fit; decorous; proper; seemly; as, decent conduct; decent language.
     Before his decent steps.   --Milton.
  2. Free from immodesty or obscenity; modest.
  3. Comely; shapely; well-formed. [Archaic]
  A sable stole of cyprus lawn
  Over thy decent shoulders drawn.   --Milton.
     By foreign hands thy decent limbs composed.   --Pope.
  4. Moderate, but competent; sufficient; hence, respectable; fairly good; reasonably comfortable or satisfying; as, a decent fortune; a decent person.
     A decent retreat in the mutability of human affairs.   --Burke.
  -- De*cent*ly, adv. -- De*cent*ness, n.
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  decent
       adj 1: socially or conventionally correct; refined or virtuous;
              "from a decent family"; "a nice girl" [syn: nice]
       2: according with custom or propriety; "her becoming modesty";
          "comely behavior"; "it is not comme il faut for a
          gentleman to be constantly asking for money"; "a decent
          burial"; "seemly behavior" [syn: becoming, comely, comme
          il faut, decorous, seemly]
       3: conforming to conventions of sexual behavior; "speech in
          this circle, if not always decent, never became lewd"-
          George Santayana [ant: indecent]
       4: enough to meet a purpose; "an adequate income"; "the food
          was adequate"; "a decent wage"; "enough food"; "food
          enough" [syn: adequate, enough]
       5: decently clothed; "are you decent?"
       6: observing conventional sexual mores in speech or behavior or
          dress; "a modest neckline in her dress"; "though one of
          her shoulder straps had slipped down, she was perfectly
          decent by current standards"
       adv : in the right manner; "please do your job properly!"; "can't
             you carry me decent?" [syn: properly, decently, in
             good order, right, the right way] [ant: improperly]