student asking question

What's "quite there" mean and when's it used?

teacher

Native speaker’s answer

Rebecca

If something "is not quite there," it means it has not reached a certain point or expected place. On the contrary, if something "is there," it has reached that point for something. "Quite" in "not quite there" means to the absolute or most degree of something - absolutely or completely, but it's not 100 percent necessary here. You can use it when you haven't reached a certain point or goal. Ex: We haven't had a conversation yet. We're not quite there yet after our fight. = We're not completely at the point of being able to have a conversation yet after our fight. Ex: The movie isn't quite there for production. Ex: Society will get there one day.

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