Thesaurus / common
EXAMPLE SENTENCES FROM THE WEB
Students would have a fully equipped laptop to call their own as well as one that didn’t lack key functionalities, which is common among donated devices.
THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC IS EXPANDING CALIFORNIA’S DIGITAL DIVIDEWALTER THOMPSONJULY 9, 2020TECHCRUNCH
The company’s financial history is occluded — common with private companies — and a bit uneven.
COINBASE REPORTED TO CONSIDER LATE 2020, EARLY 2021 PUBLIC DEBUTALEX WILHELMJULY 9, 2020TECHCRUNCH
Residents often live four to a room, share a bathroom, and congregate in crowded common spaces.
CANADA’S “NATIONAL SHAME”: COVID-19 IN NURSING HOMESSIGAL SAMUELJULY 7, 2020VOX
The system can’t be easily reverse-engineered to determine what it learned to pay attention to during training — a common problem for researchers trying to use AI to do science.
WHY IS GLASS RIGID? SIGNS OF ITS SECRET STRUCTURE EMERGE.JOHN PAVLUSJULY 7, 2020QUANTA MAGAZINE
Accounts on these platforms were all registered using a handful of common email addresses and phone numbers.
FBI NABS NIGERIAN BUSINESS SCAMMER WHO ALLEGEDLY COST VICTIMS MILLIONSTIMOTHY B. LEEJULY 6, 2020ARS TECHNICA
The Smooth Naked Horsetail is a common plant, specially by the sides of streams and pools.
HOW TO KNOW THE FERNSS. LEONARD BASTIN
I would ask you to imagine it translated into every language, a common material of understanding throughout all the world.
THE SALVAGING OF CIVILISATIONH. G. (HERBERT GEORGE) WELLS
Our social life is aimless without it, we are a crowd without a common understanding.
THE SALVAGING OF CIVILISATIONH. G. (HERBERT GEORGE) WELLS
Diplococci without capsules are common in the sputum, but have no special significance.
A MANUAL OF CLINICAL DIAGNOSISJAMES CAMPBELL TODD
He had discovered that the all-glorious boast of Spain was not exempt from the infirmities of common men.
THE PASTOR'S FIRE-SIDE VOL. 3 OF 4JANE PORTER
WORDS RELATED TO COMMON
- base
- beggarly
- common
- contemptible
- down-at-heel
- déclassé
- hack
- humble
- ignoble
- ineffectual
- inferior
- insignificant
- limited
- low
- lowborn
- lowly
- mediocre
- menial
- miserable
- modest
- narrow
- obscure
- ordinary
- paltry
- petty
- pitiful
- plebeian
- proletarian
- run-down
- scruffy
- second-class
- second-rate
- seedy
- servile
- shabby
- sordid
- squalid
- tawdry
- undistinguished
- unwashed
- vulgar
- wretched
- base
- beggarly
- common
- contemptible
- down-at-heel
- déclassé
- hack
- humble
- ignoble
- ineffectual
- inferior
- insignificant
- limited
- low
- lowborn
- lowly
- mediocre
- menial
- miserable
- modest
- narrow
- obscure
- ordinary
- paltry
- petty
- pitiful
- plebeian
- proletarian
- run-down
- scruffy
- second-class
- second-rate
- seedy
- servile
- shabby
- sordid
- squalid
- tawdry
- undistinguished
- unwashed
- vulgar
- wretched
- base
- beggarly
- common
- contemptible
- down-at-heel
- déclassé
- hack
- humble
- ignoble
- ineffectual
- inferior
- insignificant
- limited
- low
- lowborn
- lowly
- mediocre
- menial
- miserable
- modest
- narrow
- obscure
- ordinary
- paltry
- petty
- pitiful
- plebeian
- proletarian
- run-down
- scruffy
- second-class
- second-rate
- seedy
- servile
- shabby
- sordid
- squalid
- tawdry
- undistinguished
- unwashed
- vulgar
- wretched
- characterless
- colorless
- common
- conventional
- decent
- dull
- fair
- fair to middling
- fairish
- humdrum
- indifferent
- inferior
- insignificant
- intermediate
- mainstream
- mean
- medium
- middling
- moderate
- no great shakes
- of poor quality
- ordinary
- passable
- pedestrian
- run-of-the-mill
- second-rate
- so-so
- standard
- tolerable
- undistinguished
- unexceptional
- uninspired
- vanilla
Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.