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common
[ kom-uhn ]
adjective
- belonging equally to, or shared alike by, two or more or all in question:
common property;
common interests.
Antonyms: individual
- pertaining or belonging equally to an entire community, nation, or culture; public:
a common language or history;
a common water-supply system.
a common defense.
common knowledge.
a common event;
a common mistake.
Synonyms: everyday, habitual, customary
Antonyms: unusual
a rough-textured suit of the most common fabric.
common manners.
- lacking rank, station, distinction, etc.; unexceptional; ordinary: common people; a common thief.
a common soldier;
common people;
the common man;
a common thief.
- Dialect. friendly; sociable; unaffected.
- Anatomy. forming or formed by two or more parts or branches:
the common carotid arteries.
- Prosody. (of a syllable) able to be considered as either long or short.
- Grammar.
- not belonging to an inflectional paradigm; fulfilling different functions that in some languages require different inflected forms:
English nouns are in the common case whether used as subject or object.
- constituting one of two genders of a language, especially a gender comprising nouns that were formerly masculine or feminine:
Swedish nouns are either common or neuter.
- noting a word that may refer to either a male or a female:
French élève has common gender. English lacks a common gender pronoun in the third person singular.
- (of a noun) belonging to the common gender.
- Mathematics. bearing a similar relation to two or more entities.
- of, relating to, or being common stock:
common shares.
noun
- Often commons. Chiefly New England. a tract of land owned or used jointly by the residents of a community, usually a central square or park in a city or town.
- Law. the right or liberty, in common with other persons, to take profit from the land or waters of another, as by pasturing animals on another's land commonofpasturage or fishing in another's waters commonofpiscary.
- commons, (used with a singular or plural verb)
- the commonalty; the nonruling class.
- the body of people not of noble birth or not ennobled, as represented in England by the House of Commons.
- Commons, the representatives of this body.
- Commons, the House of Commons.
- commons,
- (used with a singular verb) a large dining room, especially at a university or college.
- (usually used with a plural verb) British. food provided in such a dining room.
- (usually used with a plural verb) food or provisions for any group.
- Sometimes Commons. Ecclesiastical.
- an office or form of service used on a festival of a particular kind.
- the ordinary of the Mass, especially those parts sung by the choir.
- the part of the missal and breviary containing Masses and offices of those saints assigned to them.
- Obsolete.
- the community or public.
- the common people.
common
/ ˈkɒmən /
adjective
- belonging to or shared by two or more people
common property
- belonging to or shared by members of one or more nations or communities; public
a common culture
- of ordinary standard; average
common decency
- prevailing; widespread
common opinion
- widely known or frequently encountered; ordinary
a common brand of soap
- widely known and notorious
a common nuisance
- derogatory.considered by the speaker to be low-class, vulgar, or coarse
a common accent
- prenominal having no special distinction, rank, or status
the common man
- maths
- having a specified relationship with a group of numbers or quantities
common denominator
- (of a tangent) tangential to two or more circles
- prosody (of a syllable) able to be long or short, or (in nonquantitative verse) stressed or unstressed
- grammar (in certain languages) denoting or belonging to a gender of nouns, esp one that includes both masculine and feminine referents
Latin sacerdos is common
- anatomy
- having branches
the common carotid artery
- serving more than one function
the common bile duct
- Christianity of or relating to the common of the Mass or divine office
- common or garden informal.ordinary; unexceptional
noun
- sometimes plural a tract of open public land, esp one now used as a recreation area
- law the right to go onto someone else's property and remove natural products, as by pasturing cattle or fishing (esp in the phrase right of common )
- Christianity
- a form of the proper of the Mass used on festivals that have no special proper of their own
- the ordinary of the Mass
- archaic.the ordinary people; the public, esp those undistinguished by rank or title
- in commonmutually held or used with another or others
Derived Forms
- ˈcommonness, noun
Other Words From
- common·ness noun
- over·common adjective
- over·common·ly adverb
- over·common·ness noun
- quasi-common adjective
- quasi-common·ly adverb
Word History and Origins
Origin of common1
Word History and Origins
Origin of common1
Idioms and Phrases
- in common, in joint possession or use; shared equally:
They have a love of adventure in common.
More idioms and phrases containing common
- in common
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
The email appears to have been a relatively common attempt to gain personal information from a wide range of unwitting victims.
The vaccine is delivered through a “carrier virus” that causes a common cold in chimpanzees but does not affect humans.
Another read: “We need leaders who will stand against Common Core.”
Finding the common bonds that help us realize that we have far more in common than that which separates us.
At the time, screen quotas were far more common among film producing industries.
The Smooth Naked Horsetail is a common plant, specially by the sides of streams and pools.
I would ask you to imagine it translated into every language, a common material of understanding throughout all the world.
Our social life is aimless without it, we are a crowd without a common understanding.
Diplococci without capsules are common in the sputum, but have no special significance.
He had discovered that the all-glorious boast of Spain was not exempt from the infirmities of common men.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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