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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Mundanity

Mundanity \Mun*dan"i*ty\, n. Worldliness. [Obs.]

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
mundanity

c.1500, from Middle French mondanité or directly from Medieval Latin mundanitatem (nominative mundanitas), from Late Latin mundanus "belonging to the world" (see mundane).

Wiktionary
mundanity

n. The characteristic of being mundane; ordinariness; plainness; worldliness.

Usage examples of "mundanity".

He paid as little heed as he could to such mundanities as knocks on the door.

Fun while it lasted, but only small islands of excitement among the ocean of day-to-day mundanities that is SO-2y: we spent most of our time dealing with illegal traders, copyright infringements and fraud.

The stocky young woman seemed equally amazed when Maia described mundanities of Port Sanger life she herself had long taken for granted.

One light flashing larger and brighter than the others shot past his field of view to starboard: an incoming shuttle, carrying cargo and passengers preoccupied with the mundanities of normal, everyday lives.

There was still no official estimate of how many lives had been saved from fires, or stranding in Underground tunnels, or road pileups, or the lethal mundanity of being trapped in stuck elevators.