Felicitous in a sentence as an adjective

I agree that 3PP is rarely felicitous to those who speak English.

But the Greek gave us so many felicitous words: hubris, chaos, idiot, ...

OT, but I always thought "Respect, but don't trust implicitly" would be a more accurate, if less felicitous, way of putting it. Or at least as I understand the ideal.

That's not a terribly felicitous translation, but it is by no means impenetrable.

That's what restrictions are, a way to turn ugly reality into a situation that's more felicitous for everyone.

" In this way, we prepare for "some dim dazzling trick of grace," to borrow a felicitous phrase from Walker Percy, that may illumine our minds and enliven our hearts.

Some of the less felicitous bits of the C++ standard library seem like they would have been done very differently if templates had worked from Day 1 in the language.

Very felicitous summary of what i think about mankinds exponential growth in population.

That he was previously convicted of felony possession with intent to distribute and that this precluded him from owning firearms is the only felicitous reading of that sentence.

This is what older generations would have called a "felicitous result" - one that allows creative work to be legally protected within the strict limits justified by the purpose of the copyright law and no more.

Deciding mobile is the PlaySkool version is itself an oversimplification.> Apple's felicitous focus on simplicity and Customer use-cases that's what's made them the most successful company in the worldOne can learn a lot from their success.

Felicitous definitions

adjective

exhibiting an agreeably appropriate manner or style; "a felicitous speaker"

adjective

marked by good fortune; "a felicitous life"; "a happy outcome"

See also: happy