Contented to a fault with oneself or one's actions.
Sinònims
Examples for "complacent"
Examples for "complacent"
1The market in short is complacent, with a good bit of cynicism.
2That's a good sign but we're certainly not going to be complacent.
3The government is worried New Zealanders are becoming complacent about the virus.
4Police Assistant Commissioner Richard Chambers says it's important people don't get complacent.
5Unfortunately, it is easy to become complacent by measuring the wrong things.
1He left to catch the train to Carpledon in a self-satisfied mind.
2He arrived at Maisons in the most cheerful, self-satisfied frame of mind.
3Solonet remained therefore in a self-satisfied condition of hope and becoming respect.
4And he smiled in a sly self-satisfied way at his pious pun.
5Sacha Baron Cohen's latest send-up is funny if a bit too self-satisfied.
1In practice doubtless I should be as self-complacent as any other man.
2His self-complacent reflections were cut short by the entrance of his daughter.
3It was self-complacent, yet there was small apparent ground for such complacence.
4The effect of this was to make me anything but self-complacent.
5I recognised him at once by his corpulency and self-complacent air.
6I recognized him at once by his corpulency and self-complacent air.
7His expression was keen and experienced yet too self-complacent to be highly intelligent.
8That self-complacent gentleman had not expected this visit, although he had suggested it.
9The swamp pheasant also utters a contented, self-complacent chuckle, that resembles the Goo!
10The self-complacent ignorance with which this remark was made was ludicrous in the extreme.
11It lacks the self-complacent unreasonableness of Board of Works classicism.
12But, beside this, there is no true and substantial happiness but for the self-complacent.
13A more self-complacent person did not exist in Oakville.
14All his self-complacent smiles were gone in an instant.
15The behaviour of Thornby was not quite so self-complacent.
16It looks so self-complacent, as if it knew its own beauty-thecurves are too immovable.