Middle-of-the-road in a sentence as an adjective

But the 3 Jews sitting next to me right now would see me as a more middle-of-the-road-why-can't-we-all-get-along sort.

While it's a lot in other contexts, $33m for a custom enterprise software project, even one that seems like it ought to cost much less, is pretty middle-of-the-road as a price.

When you say things like "we don't know the full story" or "******* is tricky", you aren't taking a reasonable middle-of-the-road position you're effectively endorsing the status quo.

I read him as saying that engineers should be issued drastically more equity, and that firing before cliff should be used to ensure that middle-of-the-road developers don't end up eating too much of the equity.

Someone like Peter Thiel might be a libertarian-conservative politically, but the average middle-class techie seems more like a middle-of-the-road to center-left liberal.

No one wants to burn out their rockstars, or the stalwart workhorses that will continue bringing good value for decades to come; but who cares about those middle-of-the-road employees in their mid-twenties who are just going to go and work for someone else in a few years anyway?

Middle-of-the-road definitions

adjective

supporting or pursuing a course of action that is neither liberal nor conservative

See also: centrist

adjective

not extreme, especially in political views