commonplace

from WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006)
commonplace
    adj 1: completely ordinary and unremarkable; "air travel has now
           become commonplace"; "commonplace everyday activities"
    2: not challenging; dull and lacking excitement; "an unglamorous
       job greasing engines" [syn: {commonplace}, {humdrum},
       {prosaic}, {unglamorous}, {unglamourous}]
    3: repeated too often; overfamiliar through overuse; "bromidic
       sermons"; "his remarks were trite and commonplace";
       "hackneyed phrases"; "a stock answer"; "repeating threadbare
       jokes"; "parroting some timeworn axiom"; "the trite metaphor
       `hard as nails'" [syn: {banal}, {commonplace}, {hackneyed},
       {old-hat}, {shopworn}, {stock(a)}, {threadbare}, {timeworn},
       {tired}, {trite}, {well-worn}]
    n 1: a trite or obvious remark [syn: {platitude}, {cliche},
         {banality}, {commonplace}, {bromide}]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Commonplace \Com"mon*place`\, v. t.
   To enter in a commonplace book, or to reduce to general
   heads. --Felton.
   [1913 Webster]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Commonplace \Com"mon*place`\, v. i.
   To utter commonplaces; to indulge in platitudes. [Obs.]
   --Bacon.
   [1913 Webster]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Commonplace \Com"mon*place`\, a.
   Common; ordinary; trite; as, a commonplace person, or
   observation.
   [1913 Webster]
    
from The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48
Commonplace \Com"mon*place`\, n.
   1. An idea or expression wanting originality or interest; a
      trite or customary remark; a platitude.
      [1913 Webster]

   2. A memorandum; something to be frequently consulted or
      referred to.
      [1913 Webster]

            Whatever, in my reading, occurs concerning this our
            fellow creature, I do never fail to set it down by
            way of commonplace.                   --Swift.
      [1913 Webster]

   {Commonplace book}, a book in which records are made of
      things to be remembered.
      [1913 Webster]
    
from Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0
209 Moby Thesaurus words for "commonplace":
      Attic, Babbittish, Philistine, Spartan, abstraction, accustomed,
      ascetic, austere, average, back-number, bald, banal, banality,
      bare, baseborn, below the salt, bewhiskered, bourgeois, bromide,
      bromidic, campy, candid, chaste, chestnut, classic, classical,
      cliche, cliched, cockney, common, commonly known,
      commonplace expression, conventional, corn, corny, current,
      customary, cut-and-dried, direct, dry, dull, everyday, fade,
      familiar, familiar tune, flat, frank, fusty, garden,
      garden-variety, general, general idea, generalization,
      generalized proposition, glittering generality, habitual, hackney,
      hackneyed, hackneyed expression, hackneyed saying, high-camp,
      homely, homespun, household, humble, humdrum, inanity, insipid,
      kitschy, lean, lieu commun, locus communis, low, low-camp, lowborn,
      lowbred, lowly, matter-of-fact, mean, middle-class, moth-eaten,
      mundane, musty, natural, neat, no great shakes, nonclerical,
      nondescript, normal, normative, notorious, old hat, old joke,
      old saw, old song, old story, open, ordinary, overworked,
      pedestrian, plain, plain-speaking, plain-spoken, plastic,
      platitude, platitudinous, plebeian, poetryless, pop, popular,
      predominating, prescriptive, prevailing, prevalent, prosaic,
      prosaicism, prosaism, prose, prosing, prosy, proverbial, public,
      pure, pure and simple, regular, regulation, reiteration,
      retold story, rubber stamp, rude, run-of-mine, run-of-the-mill,
      rustic, set, severe, shabby-genteel, shallowness, shibboleth,
      shopworn, simple, simple-speaking, sober, spare, square, stale,
      standard, stark, stereotype, stereotyped, stereotyped saying,
      stock, straightforward, suburban, sweeping statement, tag,
      talked-about, talked-of, third-estate, threadbare, timeworn, tired,
      tired cliche, tiresome, trite, trite saying, triteness, triticism,
      truism, truistic, twice-told tale, typical, unadorned, unaffected,
      unembellished, uneventful, unexceptional, ungenteel, unidealistic,
      unimaginative, unimpassioned, universal, universally admitted,
      universally recognized, unnoteworthy, unoriginal, unpoetic,
      unpoetical, unremarkable, unromantic, unspectacular, unvarnished,
      usual, vapid, vernacular, vulgar, warmed-over, well-kenned,
      well-known, well-recognized, well-understood, well-worn,
      widely known, wishy-washiness, wonted, workaday, workday, worn,
      worn thin, worn-out

    

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