单词 | commonly |
释义 | common /komˈən/adjective
ORIGIN: Fr commun, from L commūnis, prob from com- together, and mūnis serving, obliging commˈonable adjective
commˈonage noun
commonalˈity noun
commˈonalty noun
commˈoner noun
commˈoney noun An ordinary playing marble commˈoning noun The conversion of land to common commˈonly adverb
commˈonness noun commˈons plural noun
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
common logarithm noun A logarithm to the base ten common market noun
common measure noun
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
adjective
transitive verb
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
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
make common cause with
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
the common people The people in general the common touch The ability to empathize with ordinary people |
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