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单词 commonsense
释义

common /komˈən/

adjective
  1. Belonging equally to more than one
  2. Mutual
  3. Public
  4. General
  5. Usual
  6. Frequent
  7. Ordinary
  8. Easily got or obtained
  9. Of little value
  10. Vulgar
  11. Of low degree
noun
  1. The commonalty (Shakespeare)
  2. A tract of open land, used by all the inhabitants of a town, parish, etc
  3. A right to take something from the land of another person (law)
  4. Common sense (slang)
intransitive verb
  1. To share (Shakespeare)
  2. To board (archaic)
ORIGIN: Fr commun, from L commūnis, prob from com- together, and mūnis serving, obliging

commˈonable adjective

  1. Held in common, mutual
  2. (of animals) that may be pastured on common land

commˈonage noun

  1. The right of pasturing in common with others
  2. The right of using anything in common
  3. A common

commonalˈity noun

  1. The state of being common to all
  2. Standardization
  3. Frequency, prevalence
  4. (esp Scot) the common people

commˈonalty noun

  1. The general body of ordinary people
  2. The common people

commˈoner noun

  1. A person who is not a noble
  2. A member of the House of Commons
  3. At Oxford University, a student who does not have a scholarship

commˈoney noun

An ordinary playing marble

commˈoning noun

The conversion of land to common

commˈonly adverb

  1. In a common manner
  2. Meanly, vulgarly
  3. Ordinarily
  4. Usually, frequently, often
  5. Generally
  6. Familiarly, intimately (archaic)
  7. Publicly (Bible)

commˈonness noun

commˈons plural noun

  1. The common people, commonalty
  2. (with cap) their representatives, ie the lower House of Parliament or House of Commons
  3. Common land, kept for the mutual benefit of ordinary people
  4. Food at a common table, esp at an Oxford college
  5. The building or hall attached to a college serving as a dining room, recreation area, etc
  6. Food in general, rations

common carrier noun

A person or company that deals with the transporting of goods, messages, etc for which he or it is legally responsible

common chord noun (music)

A chord made up of three notes in a major or minor scale, ie the fundamental or generating note with its third and perfect fifth

common cold noun

A viral infection causing inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the nose and throat, resulting in a runny nose, headache, etc

common debtor noun (Scots law)

A debtor who is also owed money by a third party: the sum owed to him or her may be arrested (qv) and transferred directly to his or her creditor

common denominator see under denominate

Common Entrance noun

An entrance examination for public school, usually taken at the age of thirteen

Common Era noun

The Christian Era

common forms plural noun

The ordinary clauses which frequently occur in identical terms in writs and deeds

common fraction noun

A vulgar fraction

common gender noun

The gender of a noun or pronoun having one form for male and female, such as L bōs bull or cow, Eng student

common ground noun

A subject of mutual interest, argument, agreement, etc

commˈonhold noun

A freehold held in common by a number of owners, who have joint responsibility for managing the property (eg a block of flats)

common law noun

The law of England based on custom and precedent (cf statute law and civil law)

common-law marriage noun

  1. In England, any of various informal types of marriage ceremony given legal recognition until 1753, some of which, if performed abroad, are still legally valid
  2. Loosely, the bond between a man (common-law husband) and woman (common-law wife) living together as husband and wife but not legally married

common logarithm noun

A logarithm to the base ten

common market noun

  1. An association of countries as a single economic unit with internal free trade and common external tariffs
  2. (with caps) the European Economic Community (qv)

common measure noun

  1. A quantity that is a measure of several quantities (mathematics)
  2. Common time (music)
  3. The usual form of a ballad stanza, a quatrain containing alternating four-stress and three-stress lines

common metre noun

A four-line hymn stanza with eight syllables in the first and third lines, six in the second and fourth

common-mode failure noun (nuclear eng)

The failure of two or more supposedly independent parts of a system (eg a reactor) from a common external cause or from interaction between the parts

common noun noun (grammar)

A name that can be applied to all the members of a class, opp to proper noun

common-or-garˈden adjective

Ordinary

commˈonplace noun

  1. A platitude, pointless remark
  2. A common topic or subject (obsolete)
  3. A passage to be copied into a commonplace book.

adjective

  1. Frequent, common, usual
  2. Lacking distinction
  3. Hackneyed, overused

transitive verb

  1. To make notes of
  2. To put in a commonplace book

intransitive verb

To platitudinize

commonplace book noun

A book in which ideas, notes, memoranda, etc are jotted down

commˈonplaceness noun

common rail noun

A type of diesel injection system

commˈon-ridˈing noun

In the Scottish Borders, the equivalent of beating the bounds

common room noun

(in schools, colleges, etc) a sitting room to which the students or teachers have common access

common school noun (US)

A public elementary school

common seal noun

The official seal of a corporate body

common sense noun

  1. Average understanding
  2. Good sense or practical wisdom

commonsenseˈ or commonsensˈical adjective

common-shoreˈ see under shore5

common stair noun

An interior stair giving access to several independent flats or dwellings

common stock noun (US)

Ordinary shares

common time noun (music)

Rhythm with two, four, eight or sixteen beats to the bar

Book of Common Prayer

The liturgy of the Church of England

common in the soil (law)

The ancient right to take stone, sand, gravel and minerals from common land

common of pasture (law)

The ancient right to graze animals on common land

Court of Common Bench or Common Pleas

One of the divisions of the High Court of Justice

in common

  1. Together (archaic)
  2. Together (with)
  3. Shared or possessed equally

make common cause with

  1. To cast in one's lot with
  2. To have the same interest and aims as

philosophy of common sense

The school of philosophy that takes the universally admitted impressions of mankind as corresponding to the facts of things without any further scrutiny

short commons (informal)

Meagre rations

the common

That which is common or usual

the common good

  1. The interest of the community at large
  2. The property of a former Scottish royal burgh which is not raised by tax nor held by special act of parliament

the common people

The people in general

the common touch

The ability to empathize with ordinary people

sense /sens/

noun
  1. Faculty of receiving sensation, general or particular
  2. Subjective consciousness
  3. Inward feeling
  4. Impression
  5. Opinion
  6. Mental attitude
  7. Discernment
  8. Understanding
  9. Appreciation
  10. Feeling for what is appropriate
  11. Discerning feeling for things of some particular kind
  12. (usu in pl) one's wits or reason
  13. Soundness of judgement
  14. Reasonableness
  15. Sensible or reasonable discourse
  16. That which is reasonable
  17. Plain matter of fact
  18. The realm of sensation and sensual appetite
  19. A sense-organ (Shakespeare)
  20. A meaning, esp any of a range of meanings that a word or phrase may convey
  21. Interpretation
  22. Purport
  23. Gist
  24. Direction (esp in geometry, after Fr sens)
adjective

Relating to a sense or senses

transitive verb
  1. To have a sensation, feeling, or appreciation of
  2. To appreciate, grasp, comprehend
  3. To become aware (that)
  4. (of computers) to detect (eg a hole, constituting a symbol, in punched card or tape)
ORIGIN: L sensus, from sentīre to feel

sensed adjective

Having meaning of a specified kind, etc

senseˈful adjective

  1. Significant
  2. Full of good sense

senseˈless adjective

  1. Unconscious
  2. Without good sense
  3. Meaningless

senseˈlessly adverb

senseˈlessness noun

senˈsing noun and adjective

senˈsism noun (philosophy)

Sensationalism

senˈsist noun

sense datum noun

What is received immediately through the stimulation of a sense organ (also called sensum /senˈsəm/; pl senˈsa)

sense organ noun

A structure specially adapted for the reception of stimuli, such as eye, ear and nose

sense perception noun

Perception by the senses

bring someone to his or her senses

  1. To make someone recognize the facts
  2. To let someone understand that his or her behaviour must be mended

come to one's senses

  1. To regain consciousness
  2. To start behaving sensibly (again)

common sense see under common

five senses

The senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch

in a sense

  1. In a sense other than the obvious one
  2. In a way
  3. After a fashion

in or out of one's (right) senses

In or out of one's normal rational condition

make sense

To be understandable, sensible or rational

make sense of

  1. To understand
  2. To see the purpose in, or explanation of

sixth sense

An ability to perceive what lies beyond the powers of the five senses

take leave of one's senses

To go mad, start behaving unreasonably or irrationally

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更新时间:2025/2/23 4:17:15