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Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
commonplace
I.adjective
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
an everyday/commonplace experience (=one that is typical of normal life)
▪ The sound of gunfire is an everyday experience in the city.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ Expensive foreign cars are commonplace in this Chicago suburb.
▪ It used to be rare to see young people sleeping on the streets of London -- these days it's become increasingly commonplace.
▪ Nudism on beaches has long been commonplace in Europe.
▪ Organ transplants are now commonplace.
▪ Superstores such as Wal-Mart are now commonplace in America's small towns.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ As segregation and violence became commonplace, the national government expressed no willingness to enforce a new racial order.
▪ Divorce was commonplace among the Gentiles.
▪ He expects widespread usage of computer technology to be commonplace before that time.
▪ It's unspeakably commonplace to follow one's instincts.
▪ Judicial review of administrative decisions by central or local government and certain other bodies is now commonplace.
▪ Of course, stories of ex-smokers drifting back to the fold are commonplace.
II.noun
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪ One-parent families are now a commonplace in our society.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
▪ However, the fact that such quasi-duties are a commonplace does not, of itself, advance the cause of animals.
▪ Many of his utterances were, however, sermon commonplaces, to which parallels can be found in other contemporary preaching.
▪ The constant references to Hammett, Chandler and Casablanca, supposed to be chic, are simply commonplaces.
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Commonplace

Commonplace \Com"mon*place`\, n.

  1. An idea or expression wanting originality or interest; a trite or customary remark; a platitude.

  2. A memorandum; something to be frequently consulted or referred to.

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

    Commonplace book, a book in which records are made of things to be remembered.

Commonplace

Commonplace \Com"mon*place`\, v. i. To utter commonplaces; to indulge in platitudes. [Obs.]
--Bacon.

Commonplace

Commonplace \Com"mon*place`\, v. t. To enter in a commonplace book, or to reduce to general heads.
--Felton.

Commonplace

Commonplace \Com"mon*place`\, a. Common; ordinary; trite; as, a commonplace person, or observation.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
commonplace

1540s, "a statement generally accepted," literal translation of Latin locus communis, from Greek koinos topos "general topic." See common (adj.) + place (n.). The adjectival sense of "having nothing original" dates from c.1600.

Wiktionary
commonplace
  1. ordinary; having no remarkable characteristics. n. 1 A platitude or cliché. 2 Something that is ordinary. 3 A memorandum; something to be frequently consulted or referred to. 4 A commonplace book. v

  2. 1 To make a commonplace book. 2 To enter in a commonplace book, or to reduce to general heads. 3 (context obsolete English) To utter commonplaces; to indulge in platitudes.

WordNet
commonplace

n. a trite or obvious remark [syn: platitude, cliche, banality, bromide]

commonplace
  1. adj. obvious and dull; "trivial conversation"; "commonplace prose" [syn: banal, trivial]

  2. completely ordinary and unremarkable; "air travel has now become commonplace"; "commonplace everyday activities"

  3. not challenging; dull and lacking excitement; "an unglamorous job greasing engines" [syn: humdrum, prosaic, unglamorous, unglamourous]

  4. 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, hackneyed, old-hat, shopworn, stock(a), threadbare, timeworn, tired, trite, well-worn]

Wikipedia
Commonplace (album)

Commonplace is the sixth album of the Japanese band Every Little Thing, released on March 10, 2004 by Avex Trax.

Commonplace

Commonplace may refer to:

  • Commonplace book
  • Literary topos, the concept in rhetoric based on "commonplaces" or standard topics
  • The everyday life of commoners
  • Commonplace (album), a 2004 album by Every Little Thing

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Usage examples of "commonplace".

American moral and intellectual emancipation can be achieved only by a victory over the ideas, the conditions, and the standards which make Americanism tantamount to collective irresponsibility and to the moral and intellectual subordination of the individual to a commonplace popular average.

The triumph of the Jesuits in Asuncion was but momentary, following the general rule of triumphs, which take their way along the street with trumpets and with drums amid the acclamations of the crowd, and then, the pageant over, the chief actors fall back again into the struggles and the commonplace of ordinary life.

The sound of cell doors slamming had become commonplace for Benoit Moreau.

Calyste in a low voice of Canalis, after going through the commonplace civilities with which even the most solemn interviews begin when they take place publicly.

That was the commonplace ordinary normal way of doing it, even for Prophets, and you were no Carolingian douzeper, you were no Robin of Locksley, you were just a commonplace ordinary verynormal - whatever it was that they called them.

While he found Miss Cherrystone far out of the ordinary, there was no denying that her looks bordered on commonplace.

One of the inventions to bring the twilight of the gathering into brotherhood with the shadows on the screen is a simple thing known to the trade as the fadeaway, that had its rise in a commonplace fashion as a method of keeping the story from ending with the white glare of the empty screen.

Steadman, a stout, commonplace person, who always had the same half-frightened look, as of one who lived in the shadow of an abiding terror, obviously cowed and brow beaten by her husband, according to the Fellside household.

As when one has sampled several figures in a chapel and found them commonplace, one is apt to overlook a good one which may have got in by accident of shifting in some one of the several rearrangements made in the course of more than three centuries, so when sampling the chapels themselves, after finding half a dozen running which are of inferior merit, we approach the others with a bias against them.

Fights are commonplace between motorcycle gangs from their birth in 1945.

To Ramsey, even to Hugh, obstacles were almost welcome, as enabling them to show to a prying world that nothing beyond the grayest commonplace was occurring between them.

After Hitler, war was commonplace, genocide routine, nuclear weapons valued for the megadeaths they could generate.

While it is commonplace and accurate to speak of Japan being under the control of fundamentally authoritarian and militaristic governments from the early 1930s until 1945, the fact is that it remained under military control until 1952.

They had hardly exchanged a few commonplace words when two Indian girls made their appearance, offering all sorts of nicknacks for sale.

Woundings, slashings, cannibalism, pederasty, paedophilia, intestinal rape, sadistic penetrations of infants and the ageing became commonplace.