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common Examples

EN[ˈkɒmən] [ˈkɑmən] [-ɒmən]
US

    Examples of common in a Sentence

  • Examples of common
    1. an act affirmative of common law
    2. The most common antiglycolytic agent is sodium fluoride.
    3. The hovel stood in the centre of what had once been a vegetable garden, but was now a patch of rank weeds. Surrounding this, almost like a zareba, was an irregular ring of gorse and brambles, an unclaimed vestige of the original common.
  • Examples of commons
    1. All the laws of England have been made by the kings of England, consulting with the nobility and commons. - Thomas Hobbes.
    2. Only ringed hogs may forage in the commons.
    3. The Renaissance festival started with the "peasants" meeting in the commons.
    4. The commons is the green space surrounded by the village hall, the school, and the church.
    5. The commons of New England towns are important contributors to their charm.
  • Examples of commoner
    1. That’s why the bloggerati pounced gleefully last week on the news that one of their own had fallen in love with a commoner, er, commenter.
    2. The pavilion's tour de force is the private theater, which provided the emperor with a cozy perch to view chaqu, a form of opera invented by a commoner that became all the rage in 18th-century Beijing.
  • Examples of commonest
    1. Heartburn and acid reflux are the next commonest symptoms.
    2. The commonest and most conspicuous of the cacti is the "dildoe" (Cereus Swartzii), a columnar form growing to as much as 20 feet in height, a plant the gross physiology of which is probably very similar to that of the sahuaro (Camegiea gigantea).
    3. As exemplified by the white-handed gibbon, the commonest and best-studied member of the group, they show a remarkable convergence in social behavior to the dusky titi and other monogamous New World primates.
    4. Persistence of the vitellointestinal duct as a whole or part of it leads to a wide variety of anomalies–Meckel's diverticulum is the commonest lesion and a PVID is the rarest.
  • Examples of more common
    1. Interracial marriages are getting more common these days thanks to globalization.
    2. Mainstreaming has become more common in recent years, as studies have shown that many mainstreamed students with mild learning disabilities learn better than their non-mainstreamed counterparts.
    3. Now more common are postpremiere parties that have 500 guests or fewer.
    4. Premarital sex is by now far more common than it was in the 1920s.
    5. Among the moths, typicals were more common than melanics.
    6. "A starter marriage is one where the couple marries young and gets divorced before the arrival of the first child — and usually before the arrival of the first wrinkle. Starter marriages are more common among overachievers.".
    7. The written form of the language universally taught in schools is Commonwealth English with a slight emphasis on a few words which might be more common in the specific areas than others.
  • Examples of most common
    1. The gradual uplift of mountains is the most common form of orogenous activity. ‎
    2. One of the most common synaesthetic effects is to perceive each letter as having a colour.
    3. The third most common motive for Americans to commit espionage is disgruntlement, usually caused by the person's relationships or treatment in the workplace, and the associated desire to take revenge.
    4. There are several species of the Fireback pheasant, the most common of which is the Siamese, which inhabits parts of Siam.
    5. Shitbum drunks tend to be the most common frequent fliers.
    6. The most common mood in English is the indicative.
    7. The most common symptom is a mild mottle on the youngest leaves of infected plants.
    8. The three most common nonfood picas were eating of strings and rags; feces, vomit, and urine; and paper, cigarettes, and soil.
    9. The most common foot-related injury I see for the weekend warrior is heel pain.
    10. The manifestation of such philosophy seemed to wax and wane, being the most common one time, but virtually without followers at another, apparently disappearing.
Related Links:
  1. en commonly
  2. en commons
  3. fr commons
  4. en commonplace
  5. en commonwealth
Source: Wiktionary
Difficultness: Level 1
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Easy     ➨     Difficult
Definiteness: Level 9
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Definite    ➨     Versatile