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Ethan
Is it ok to use “well-planned” to describe people? For example, he is so well-planned all the time and never let things go wrong.
Oct 5, 2021 4:16 PM
Answers · 9
3
As Guide Dog Saint suggested "well-organized" would be a much better word choice. Using "well-planned" to describe a person would imply that they were created in a laboratory rather than born naturally.
October 5, 2021
1
"well-organized" or "well-prepared" would be better, because that's the natural expression
October 5, 2021
1
I agree with GuideDogSaint. "Well-organized."
October 5, 2021
1
I think well-organised is more common.
October 5, 2021
As the others said . . . Well Planned should generally be applied to an actual plan (or something that was planned), not a person. You could say his party, wedding, military campaign, trip, etc were well planned.
October 6, 2021
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