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Ordinary Sort Unusual Adjective Bre ˈɔːdnri ˈɔːrdneri Day

Word ordinary
WordType (adjective)
Phonetic BrE / ˈɔːdnri / NAmE / ˈɔːrdneri /
Example
  • an ordinary sort of day
  • in the ordinary course of events
  • ordinary people like you and me
  • this was no ordinary meeting.
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Content

ordinary

(adjective)BrE / ˈɔːdnri / NAmE / ˈɔːrdneri /
  1. not unusual or different in any way
    • an ordinary sort of day
    • in the ordinary course of events
    • ordinary people like you and me
    • This was no ordinary meeting.
  2. having no unusual or interesting features
    • compare extraordinary
      https://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/extraordinary
    • The meal was very ordinary.
  3. used to say what normally happens in a particular situation
    • In the ordinary way, she's not a nervous person.
  4. unusual or different
    • I'm looking for something a little more out of the ordinary.
    • His behaviour was nothing out of the ordinary (= not unusual).

    Extra Examples

    • It was a perfectly ordinary day.
    • The meal was pretty ordinary.
    • The wines produced were at best very ordinary.
    • He had an ordinary sort of face.
    • He was not a nervous person in the ordinary way.
    • I lead a very ordinary life.
    • I used to dream of an ordinary life.
    • It began as an ordinary sort of day.
    • It was, for most ordinary citizens, a time of prosperity.
    • Nowadays even a very ordinary London flat costs a fortune.
    • Poetry differs from ordinary language.
    • She doubted that, in ordinary circumstances, the two would have got on well together.
    • The images can be printed on ordinary paper.
    • These plates are for ordinary, everyday use.
    • We were an ordinary family.

    Word Origin

    • late Middle English: the noun partly via Old French; the adjective from Latin ordinarius ‘orderly’ (reinforced by French ordinaire), from ordo, ordin- ‘order’.
Copyright This card's content is collected from the following dictionaries: Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary

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