COMMONPLACE


Meaning of COMMONPLACE in English

I. ˈ ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷ˌ ̷ ̷ sometimes | ̷ ̷ ̷ ̷ˈ ̷ ̷ noun

Etymology: translation of Latin locus communis widely applicable argument or thesis, translation of Greek koinos topos

1.

a. obsolete : a passage applicable to particular cases : theme , topic : the text of a discourse

b. archaic : a striking or especially noticeable passage ; usually : such a passage entered in a commonplace book

c.

[by shortening]

obsolete : commonplace book

2.

a. : an opinion, statement, or other expression lacking originality or freshness and often repeated and generally accepted : a stock comment or subject of remark : truism , cliché

a commonplace in the study of human nature that men often turn against those who have raised them — Hilaire Belloc

the superficial commonplaces which pass as axioms in our popular intellectual milieu — M.R.Cohen

b. : the quality or state of commonness

their originality has become our commonplace — Virginia Woolf

c. : a thing commonly encountered : a common ordinary object, occurrence, or practice taken for granted and arousing no interest or curiosity

to most of us railways are one of the commonplaces of life — O.S.Nock

II. adjective

: having nothing out of common : without originality, freshness, or interest : commonly encountered : ordinary , dull , trite , stale

revolutionary in the seventies, but commonplace by 1900 — F.L.Mott

the lover whose imagination makes a goddess of some commonplace young woman — C.E.Montague

• com·mon·place·ly adverb

• com·mon·place·ness noun -es

III. transitive verb

: to extract striking or memorable passages from (as for a commonplace book) especially with arrangement of the passages under general headings

intransitive verb

: to employ commonplaces in communication

Webster's New International English Dictionary.      Новый международный словарь английского языка Webster.