-
81 Nullachtfünfzehn
umg., pej.I indekl. Adj.; nur präd. nothing to write home aboutII Adv.: im Laden wird man nur nullachtfünfzehn bedient the service in the shop is nothing to write home about* * *nụll|ạcht|fụ̈nf|zehn [nʊl|axt'fʏnftseːn] [nUl|axt'fʊftseːn] (inf)1. adj invrun-of-the-mill (inf)2. advin a run-of-the-mill way* * *null·acht·fuff·zehn[nʊlʔaxtˈfʊftse:n]null·acht·fünf·zehn[ˈnʊlˈʔaxtˈfʏnftse:n]adj (fam) run-of-the-mill* * *1. 2.adverbial <dressed, furnished> in a run-of-the-mill way* * *Nullachtfünfzehn… im subst run-of-the-mill…, nondescript…* * *1. 2.adverbial <dressed, furnished> in a run-of-the-mill way -
82 nullachtfünfzehn
umg., pej.I indekl. Adj.; nur präd. nothing to write home aboutII Adv.: im Laden wird man nur nullachtfünfzehn bedient the service in the shop is nothing to write home about* * *nụll|ạcht|fụ̈nf|zehn [nʊl|axt'fʏnftseːn] [nUl|axt'fʊftseːn] (inf)1. adj invrun-of-the-mill (inf)2. advin a run-of-the-mill way* * *null·acht·fuff·zehn[nʊlʔaxtˈfʊftse:n]null·acht·fünf·zehn[ˈnʊlˈʔaxtˈfʏnftse:n]adj (fam) run-of-the-mill* * *1. 2.adverbial <dressed, furnished> in a run-of-the-mill way* * *nullachtfünfzehn umg, pejA. undekl adj; nur präd nothing to write home aboutB. adv:im Laden wird man nur nullachtfünfzehn bedient the service in the shop is nothing to write home about* * *1. 2.adverbial <dressed, furnished> in a run-of-the-mill way -
83 común
adj.1 common, average, ordinary, commonplace.2 common, regular, everyday, usual.3 common, joint, general, group.* * *► adjetivo1 (gen) common2 (compartido) shared, communal3 (amigos) mutual1 the community1 PLÍTICA the Commons\fuera de lo común out of the ordinaryhacer algo en común to do something jointlypor lo común generallybien común common goodel común de la gente the majority of people* * *adj.* * *1. ADJ1) (=compartido) [afición, intereses] common; [amigo] mutualtienen una serie de características comunes — they share a series of features, they have a series of common features o features in common
•
común a algn/algo — common to sb/sthlo común a todas las democracias — what all democracies share in common, a feature common to all democracies
2) (=colectivo) [causa, frente, espacio] common; [gastos] communal•
tener algo en común — to have sth in commonsu pasión por el fútbol es lo único que tienen en común — their passion for football is all they have in common
acuerdo 1), bien 4., 2), denominador, fosa, lugar 1), mercado, sentido 2., 1), b)•
hacer algo en común — to do sth together3) (=frecuente) [enfermedad, opinión] common, widespread; [costumbre] widespread; [cualidad] common, ordinary•
fuera de lo común — exceptional, extraordinarytiene una voz única, algo fuera de lo común — she has a unique voice, quite exceptional o extraordinary
delincuente, nombre 2)•
por lo común — as a rule4) Esp (Educ) [asignatura] core2. SM1)el común de los mortales — ordinary mortals, any ordinary person
2) * (=retrete) toilet, bathroom3) (Pol) [en el Reino Unido]* * *1)a) <intereses/características> common (before n); < amigo> mutualb) (en locs)en común: no tenemos nada en común we have nothing in common; una cuenta bancaria en común a joint bank account; le hicimos un regalo en común we gave her a joint present; hicieron el trabajo en común they did the work together; no está acostumbrada a la vida en común con otras personas — she is not used to living with other people
2) (corriente, frecuente) commoncomún y corriente — (normal, nada especial) ordinary; < expresión> common
es una casa común y corriente — it's just an ordinary house, the house is nothing special
* * *= commonplace, common [commoner -comp., commonest -sup.], popular, run-of-the-mill, shared, standard, ubiquitous, collective, crosscutting [cross cutting], pooled, concerted, everyday, pervading, ordinary, communal, prosaic.Ex. Microfilm and microfiche formats are now commonplace in most libraries.Ex. When the cataloguer turns to the description of a piece of music a common problem will be the absence of a title page to be used as the chief source of information.Ex. Although the fifteenth edition met with some success, it was not generally popular.Ex. Guides are almost always worth thinking of as the first type of bibliography to search when it is a quick check of run-of-the-mill bibliographical facts which is required.Ex. A work of shared responsibility is one where the work has arisen from collaboration between two or more persons or corporative bodies.Ex. Photographs are normally kept in drawers of standard filing cabinets, with folders or pockets, or both.Ex. Worldwide, however, the printed book is still the most ubiquitous source of record = Sin embargo, el libro impreso es aún en todo el mundo la fuente de información escrita más común.Ex. 'I'm really not trying to put anyone on the spot and, frankly, I'm not too surprised and only a little disappointed at your collective ignorance,' he commented.Ex. The plan comprises over twenty projects addressing the partnership's three priority themes -- access, empowerment and governance -- and four crosscutting issues -- youth, the media, gender and local (community-based) knowledge.Ex. A group of 64 libraries realised substantial cost reductions by joining in a pooled fund to self-insure for unemployment compensation.Ex. There is an obvious need for a concerted and deliberate study of US information policy-making.Ex. We have too much invested, and the new systems too intimately integrated into the everyday operation of the library, for us to assume any longer that we can temper their influence on emerging standards.Ex. While not addressing specific issues the rejoinder focuses on a few pervading themes.Ex. Control is exercised over which terms are used, but otherwise the terms are ordinary words.Ex. Excavation in Qumran suggests that the people were organised on a highly communal basis and adept in the art of pottery and bookmaking.Ex. Take the prosaic problem of the great department store.----* aura común = turkey vulture.* auxiliar común = common auxiliary.* bien común, el = common good, the, common wealth, the.* calderón común = pilot whale.* Cámara de los Comunes, la = House of Commons, the.* comunidad de prácticas comunes = community of practice.* común, lo = standard practice, the.* común y corriente = unremarkable.* crear un fondo común de conocimientos = pool + knowledge.* crear un fondo común de experiencias profesionales = pool + expertise.* creencia común = common belief.* demasiado poco común = all too rare.* Denominación Común de Productos Industriales (NIPRO) = Common Nomenclature of Industrial Products (NIPRO).* denominador común = common thread.* en común con = in common with.* encontrar cosas comunes = find + common ground.* enfermedad poco común = rare disease.* espacio público común = commons.* experiencia profesional común = pool of expertise.* faceta común = common facet.* fondo común de conocimientos = pool of knowledge, pool of expertise.* fondo común de inversión = mutual fund.* fosa común = mass grave.* fuera de lo común = eccentric, odd, unordinary, out of the ordinary, a cut above the rest, a cut above.* gente común, la = ordinary people, common people, the.* gente común y corriente, la = common people, the.* hacer un frente común = stand up as + one.* harina común = all-purpose flour, plain flour.* interés común = shared interest.* intereses comunes = community of interest.* lechuza común = barn owl.* Lenguaje Común de Instrucción de EURONET = EURONET Common Command Language.* lo poco común = rarity, rareness.* lugar común de alimentación = feeding ground.* lugar común de encuentro = meeting ground.* más común = mainstream.* Mercado Común, el = Common Market, the.* nombre común = common name.* normas comunes = standard practices.* palabra común = common word.* persona común = ordinary person.* poco común = rare, unfamiliar, unusual, uncommon, unordinary, out of the ordinary.* práctica común = common practice.* práctica común, la = normal pattern, the.* proyecto en común = joint effort.* puntos comunes = common ground.* que era común anteriormente = once-common.* que fue común antes = once-common.* qué poco común = how odd.* resfriado común, el = common cold, the.* rorcual común = fin whale.* salón común = common room.* sentido común = common sense, good judgement, judgement [judgment], good sense.* ser algo común = be a fact of life, dominate + the scene, become + a common feature, be a part of life.* ser algo poco común = be the exception rather than the rule.* ser común = be the case (with).* ser demasiado común = be all too common.* subdivisión común = common subdivision.* subencabezamiento común = free-floating subdivision.* tener Algo en común = have + Nombre + in common, share + Nombre + in common.* tener características en común = share + similarities.* tener cosas en común = share + common ground.* tener en común = hold in + common, tread + common ground.* título común = common title.* trabajar en común = interwork, pull together.* trabajo en común = interworking.* * *1)a) <intereses/características> common (before n); < amigo> mutualb) (en locs)en común: no tenemos nada en común we have nothing in common; una cuenta bancaria en común a joint bank account; le hicimos un regalo en común we gave her a joint present; hicieron el trabajo en común they did the work together; no está acostumbrada a la vida en común con otras personas — she is not used to living with other people
2) (corriente, frecuente) commoncomún y corriente — (normal, nada especial) ordinary; < expresión> common
es una casa común y corriente — it's just an ordinary house, the house is nothing special
* * *= commonplace, common [commoner -comp., commonest -sup.], popular, run-of-the-mill, shared, standard, ubiquitous, collective, crosscutting [cross cutting], pooled, concerted, everyday, pervading, ordinary, communal, prosaic.Ex: Microfilm and microfiche formats are now commonplace in most libraries.
Ex: When the cataloguer turns to the description of a piece of music a common problem will be the absence of a title page to be used as the chief source of information.Ex: Although the fifteenth edition met with some success, it was not generally popular.Ex: Guides are almost always worth thinking of as the first type of bibliography to search when it is a quick check of run-of-the-mill bibliographical facts which is required.Ex: A work of shared responsibility is one where the work has arisen from collaboration between two or more persons or corporative bodies.Ex: Photographs are normally kept in drawers of standard filing cabinets, with folders or pockets, or both.Ex: Worldwide, however, the printed book is still the most ubiquitous source of record = Sin embargo, el libro impreso es aún en todo el mundo la fuente de información escrita más común.Ex: 'I'm really not trying to put anyone on the spot and, frankly, I'm not too surprised and only a little disappointed at your collective ignorance,' he commented.Ex: The plan comprises over twenty projects addressing the partnership's three priority themes -- access, empowerment and governance -- and four crosscutting issues -- youth, the media, gender and local (community-based) knowledge.Ex: A group of 64 libraries realised substantial cost reductions by joining in a pooled fund to self-insure for unemployment compensation.Ex: There is an obvious need for a concerted and deliberate study of US information policy-making.Ex: We have too much invested, and the new systems too intimately integrated into the everyday operation of the library, for us to assume any longer that we can temper their influence on emerging standards.Ex: While not addressing specific issues the rejoinder focuses on a few pervading themes.Ex: Control is exercised over which terms are used, but otherwise the terms are ordinary words.Ex: Excavation in Qumran suggests that the people were organised on a highly communal basis and adept in the art of pottery and bookmaking.Ex: Take the prosaic problem of the great department store.* aura común = turkey vulture.* auxiliar común = common auxiliary.* bien común, el = common good, the, common wealth, the.* calderón común = pilot whale.* Cámara de los Comunes, la = House of Commons, the.* comunidad de prácticas comunes = community of practice.* común, lo = standard practice, the.* común y corriente = unremarkable.* crear un fondo común de conocimientos = pool + knowledge.* crear un fondo común de experiencias profesionales = pool + expertise.* creencia común = common belief.* demasiado poco común = all too rare.* Denominación Común de Productos Industriales (NIPRO) = Common Nomenclature of Industrial Products (NIPRO).* denominador común = common thread.* en común con = in common with.* encontrar cosas comunes = find + common ground.* enfermedad poco común = rare disease.* espacio público común = commons.* experiencia profesional común = pool of expertise.* faceta común = common facet.* fondo común de conocimientos = pool of knowledge, pool of expertise.* fondo común de inversión = mutual fund.* fosa común = mass grave.* fuera de lo común = eccentric, odd, unordinary, out of the ordinary, a cut above the rest, a cut above.* gente común, la = ordinary people, common people, the.* gente común y corriente, la = common people, the.* hacer un frente común = stand up as + one.* harina común = all-purpose flour, plain flour.* interés común = shared interest.* intereses comunes = community of interest.* lechuza común = barn owl.* Lenguaje Común de Instrucción de EURONET = EURONET Common Command Language.* lo poco común = rarity, rareness.* lugar común de alimentación = feeding ground.* lugar común de encuentro = meeting ground.* más común = mainstream.* Mercado Común, el = Common Market, the.* nombre común = common name.* normas comunes = standard practices.* palabra común = common word.* persona común = ordinary person.* poco común = rare, unfamiliar, unusual, uncommon, unordinary, out of the ordinary.* práctica común = common practice.* práctica común, la = normal pattern, the.* proyecto en común = joint effort.* puntos comunes = common ground.* que era común anteriormente = once-common.* que fue común antes = once-common.* qué poco común = how odd.* resfriado común, el = common cold, the.* rorcual común = fin whale.* salón común = common room.* sentido común = common sense, good judgement, judgement [judgment], good sense.* ser algo común = be a fact of life, dominate + the scene, become + a common feature, be a part of life.* ser algo poco común = be the exception rather than the rule.* ser común = be the case (with).* ser demasiado común = be all too common.* subdivisión común = common subdivision.* subencabezamiento común = free-floating subdivision.* tener Algo en común = have + Nombre + in common, share + Nombre + in common.* tener características en común = share + similarities.* tener cosas en común = share + common ground.* tener en común = hold in + common, tread + common ground.* título común = common title.* trabajar en común = interwork, pull together.* trabajo en común = interworking.* * *A1 ‹intereses/características› common ( before n); ‹amigo› mutualtrabajar por el bien común/un objetivo común to work for the common good/a common objectivecaracterísticas comunes a toda la especie characteristics common to o shared by the whole speciesun sentimiento común a todos los hombres a sentiment shared by all mankind2 ( en locs):de común acuerdo by common consentlo decidimos de común acuerdo ( frml); it was decided by common agreement o consentse separaron de común acuerdo they separated by mutual agreement o common consentla decisión fue tomada de común acuerdo con nuestros aliados the decision was taken in agreement o ( frml) in concert with our alliesen común: tienen una cuenta bancaria en común they have a joint bank accountle hicimos un regalo en común we gave her a joint presentno tengo nada en común con él I have nothing in common with himno está acostumbrada a la vida en común con otras personas she is not used to living with other people o to communal livingB (corriente, frecuente) commonJuan Gómez es un nombre muy común Juan Gómez is a very common nameun modelo fuera de lo común a very unusual modelno es común que un niño sepa leer a esa edad it is unusual for a child to be able to read at that agees común que haya inundaciones en esta zona flooding is frequent o common in this areatiene una inteligencia poco común she is unusually intelligentpor lo común as a ruleuna blusa común y silvestre a fairly ordinary blousemurió como el común de los mortales he died just like any common mortal o ordinary person* * *
común adjetivo
‹ amigo› mutualb) ( en locs)
de común acuerdo con algn in agreement with sb;
en común ‹esfuerzo/regalo› joint ( before n);
no tenemos nada en común we have nothing in common
un modelo fuera de lo común a very unusual model;
común y corriente (normal, nada especial) ordinary
común
I adjetivo
1 (frecuente) common, usual: es poco común, it's unusual
2 (ordinario, corriente) ordinary
3 (compartido) shared, communal: nos une un interés común, we are united by a common interest
II sustantivo masculino GB Pol los Comunes, the Commons
♦ Locuciones: de común acuerdo, by common consent
en común, (conjuntamente) hacer algo en común, to do sthg jointly
(característica compartida) tienen varios rasgos en común, they have several characteristics in common
por lo común, generally
' común' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
acuerdo
- baja
- bajo
- cabeza
- contraponer
- convivencia
- corriente
- dato
- denominador
- despertarse
- fondo
- fosa
- irse
- juicio
- llevar
- múltipla
- múltiplo
- permitirse
- rara
- raro
- sentar
- sentida
- sentido
- soler
- tela
- tópica
- tópico
- única
- único
- uniforme
- unitaria
- unitario
- vista
- visto
- vulgar
- delincuente
- imponer
- mercado
- norma
- peculiar
- rareza
- tino
English:
appeal
- base
- cause
- common
- common denominator
- common sense
- commonplace
- crane
- cure
- deserve
- enjoy
- gumption
- in
- intend
- iota
- jointly
- kitty
- mass grave
- modicum
- mutual
- ordinary
- original
- partnership
- pool
- prevalent
- rank
- reason
- run-of-the-mill
- sense
- stand out
- uncommon
- unusual
- cliché
- communal
- consent
- garden
- house
- lowest common denominator
- ounce
- plain
- platitude
- rarity
- run
- share
* * *♦ adj1. [compartido] [amigo, interés] mutual;[bienes, pastos] communal;el bien común the common good;el motociclismo es nuestra afición común we both like motorcycling;¿cómo llevan la vida en común? how are they finding living together?;hacer algo en común to do sth together;hacer algo de común acuerdo to do sth by mutual consent o agreement;es un rasgo común a todos los reptiles it's a characteristic shared by o common to all reptiles;pusimos nuestros recursos en común we pooled our resources;realizaron una puesta en común de lo observado they pooled their observations;tener algo en común to have sth in common;no tengo nada en común con ella I have nothing in common with her2. [habitual, normal] common;una enfermedad muy común en regiones tropicales a disease very common in tropical regions;es común que llueva en primavera it's normal for it to rain in spring, it often rains in spring;fuera de lo común out of the ordinary;poco común unusual;por lo común generally;es una persona común y corriente he's a perfectly ordinary person3. [ordinario, vulgar] ordinary, average;un vino común an average o ordinary wine;una madera común a common type of wood♦ nmcomo el común de los mortales like any ordinary person o common mortal* * *I adj common;poco común unusual, rare;por lo común generally;en común in common;tener algo en común have sth in commonII m:el común de las gentes the common man* * *1) : common2)común y corriente : ordinary, regular3)por lo común : generally, as a rule* * *común adj1. (en general) commonel naranjo es un árbol muy común en la zona mediterránea orange trees are very common in the Mediterranean area2. (compartido) shared -
84 corriente y moliente
familiar ordinary, run-of-the-mill————————run of the mill, common or garden* * *Esp very ordinary* * *(adj.) = run-of-the-millEx. Guides are almost always worth thinking of as the first type of bibliography to search when it is a quick check of run-of-the-mill bibliographical facts which is required.* * *(adj.) = run-of-the-millEx: Guides are almost always worth thinking of as the first type of bibliography to search when it is a quick check of run-of-the-mill bibliographical facts which is required.
-
85 Feld-Wald-und-Wiesen-
Fẹld-Wạld-und-Wie|sen- in cpds (inf) common-or-garden (Brit), garden-variety (esp US), run-of-the-millein Feld-Wald-und-Wíésen-Arzt — a common-or-garden (Brit) or garden-variety (esp US) or run-of-the-mill doctor
ein Feld-Wald-und-Wíésen-Thema — a run-of-the-mill subject
* * *(ugs.) run-of-the-mill; common-orgarden* * *Feld-Wald-und-Wiesen-… im subst umg common-or-garden …, run-of-the-mill …, US auch garden-variety …* * *(ugs.) run-of-the-mill; common-orgarden -
86 adocenado
adj.commonplace, ordinary.past part.past participle of spanish verb: adocenar.* * *1→ link=adocenarse adocenarse► adjetivo1 commonplace, ordinary* * *ADJ common-or-garden ** * *- da adjetivo (pey) run-of-the-mill (pej)* * *- da adjetivo (pey) run-of-the-mill (pej)* * *adocenado -da* * *
Del verbo adocenar: ( conjugate adocenar)
adocenado es:
el participio
adocenado,-a adjetivo ordinary
pey run of the mill
' adocenado' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
adocenada
English:
derivative
* * *adocenado, -a adjmediocre, run-of-the-mill -
87 mediocre
adj.mediocre, average.f. & m.mediocre person, mediocrity.* * *► adjetivo1 mediocre* * *adj.mediocre, ordinary* * *ADJ average; pey mediocre* * *adjetivo mediocre* * *= meagre [meager, -USA], nondescript, run-of-the-mill, mediocre, indifferent, second-rate, undistinguished, lamely, unimpressive, unremarkable.Ex. Soon, however, the collection outgrew its meagre quarters and a full-fledged library occupying a 40x60 foot area came into being.Ex. He went on to explain that while there were no unsightly slums, there was a fairly large district of rather nondescript homes intermingled with plain two- and three-family brick and frame dwellings, principally in the eastern reaches of the city.Ex. Guides are almost always worth thinking of as the first type of bibliography to search when it is a quick check of run-of-the-mill bibliographical facts which is required.Ex. Despite the proliferation of biographies aimed at young adults which have lavish illustrations, easy-to-read print and attractive layout, most of them are lifeless and mediocre.Ex. This risk I gladly accept in the hope that I have succeeded in bringing to your notice the fact that there is an ailment here, however indifferent my diagnosis may have been, and by provoking thought on the matter.Ex. To date the library profession has been passive in its approach to new technology and has accepted the second-rate products it has been offered.Ex. You are about to hear an undistinguished non-expert speak prosaically about the library catalog as it currently is.Ex. People think that that this is just a stunt to generate more traffic to a lamely performing Web site.Ex. The author deems voice recognition technology to be unimpressive but finds that text-to-speech conversion has greatly improved.Ex. This dish, billed as the house specialty, was just an unremarkable griddled steak topped with some green bell peppers and green onions.* * *adjetivo mediocre* * *= meagre [meager, -USA], nondescript, run-of-the-mill, mediocre, indifferent, second-rate, undistinguished, lamely, unimpressive, unremarkable.Ex: Soon, however, the collection outgrew its meagre quarters and a full-fledged library occupying a 40x60 foot area came into being.
Ex: He went on to explain that while there were no unsightly slums, there was a fairly large district of rather nondescript homes intermingled with plain two- and three-family brick and frame dwellings, principally in the eastern reaches of the city.Ex: Guides are almost always worth thinking of as the first type of bibliography to search when it is a quick check of run-of-the-mill bibliographical facts which is required.Ex: Despite the proliferation of biographies aimed at young adults which have lavish illustrations, easy-to-read print and attractive layout, most of them are lifeless and mediocre.Ex: This risk I gladly accept in the hope that I have succeeded in bringing to your notice the fact that there is an ailment here, however indifferent my diagnosis may have been, and by provoking thought on the matter.Ex: To date the library profession has been passive in its approach to new technology and has accepted the second-rate products it has been offered.Ex: You are about to hear an undistinguished non-expert speak prosaically about the library catalog as it currently is.Ex: People think that that this is just a stunt to generate more traffic to a lamely performing Web site.Ex: The author deems voice recognition technology to be unimpressive but finds that text-to-speech conversion has greatly improved.Ex: This dish, billed as the house specialty, was just an unremarkable griddled steak topped with some green bell peppers and green onions.* * *mediocre* * *
mediocre adjetivo
mediocre
mediocre adjetivo mediocre
' mediocre' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
discreta
- discreto
- ordinaria
- ordinario
- regular
- flojo
- mediano
- pobre
English:
goalkeeper
- indifferent
- mediocre
- rate
- sort
- lack
- mediocrity
- second
* * *mediocre adjmediocre, average* * *adj mediocre* * *mediocre adj: mediocre, average -
88 montón
m.1 heap, pile, bunch, bunch of things.2 lot, great number, large number, bundle.* * *1 heap, pile\ser del montón to be nothing special, be one of the crowd* * *noun m.heap, pile* * *SM1) [gen] heap, pile; [de nieve] pileun hombre del montón — just an ordinary o average chap
2) * (=mucho)tenemos montones — we've got loads o masses *
un montón de — loads of *, masses of *
un montón de gente — loads of people *, masses of people *
a montones: ejemplos hay a montones — there is no shortage of examples
* * *a) ( pila) pile(ser) del montón — (fam)
b) (fam) ( gran cantidad)me duele un montón — it hurts like hell (colloq)
me gusta un montón — I'm crazy about her/it (colloq)
* * *= congeries, heap, stack, wadge, pile, stash, slew.Ex. To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.Ex. The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex. Examination reveals positions on the cards where the light passes through all the cards in a stack.Ex. By meeting authors cold print takes on a human voice; wadges of paper covered with words turn into treasure troves full of interest.Ex. However, it would be a time consuming task for the student or researcher to sit down with piles of periodicals, frantically scanning contents lists to try to trace articles on his chosen topic.Ex. It tells the story of a young detective who stumbles across a stash of jewel thieves hiding out in an abandoned house.Ex. His work includes 47 novels, and slews of essays, plays, reviews, poems, histories, and public speeches.----* ahorrar un montón = save + a bundle, save + a ton.* ahorrar un montón de dinero = save + a ton of money.* a montón = aplenty [a-plenty].* a montones = in droves, by the sackful.* costar un montón = cost + a bundle.* del montón = unimpressive, a dime a dozen.* desde hace un montón de tiempo = for yonks.* gastarse un montón de dinero = lash out (on), go to + town on.* hace un montón de tiempo = yonks.* montones = oodles, scores.* montones de = mountain(s) of, scores of, lashings of.* un montón = like crazy, like mad.* un montón de = a pile of, a stack of, a bundle of, a truckload of, a sackful of, a raft of.* un montón de dinero = a huge amount of money.* valer un montón = cost + a bundle.* * *a) ( pila) pile(ser) del montón — (fam)
b) (fam) ( gran cantidad)me duele un montón — it hurts like hell (colloq)
me gusta un montón — I'm crazy about her/it (colloq)
* * *= congeries, heap, stack, wadge, pile, stash, slew.Ex: To be sure, it still has its congeries of mills and factories, its grimy huddle of frame dwellings and congested tenements, its stark, jagged skyline, but its old face is gradually changing.
Ex: The raw material of white paper was undyed linen -- or in very early days hempen -- rags, which the paper-maker bought in bulk, sorted and washed, and then put by in a damp heap for four or five days to rot.Ex: Examination reveals positions on the cards where the light passes through all the cards in a stack.Ex: By meeting authors cold print takes on a human voice; wadges of paper covered with words turn into treasure troves full of interest.Ex: However, it would be a time consuming task for the student or researcher to sit down with piles of periodicals, frantically scanning contents lists to try to trace articles on his chosen topic.Ex: It tells the story of a young detective who stumbles across a stash of jewel thieves hiding out in an abandoned house.Ex: His work includes 47 novels, and slews of essays, plays, reviews, poems, histories, and public speeches.* ahorrar un montón = save + a bundle, save + a ton.* ahorrar un montón de dinero = save + a ton of money.* a montón = aplenty [a-plenty].* a montones = in droves, by the sackful.* costar un montón = cost + a bundle.* del montón = unimpressive, a dime a dozen.* desde hace un montón de tiempo = for yonks.* gastarse un montón de dinero = lash out (on), go to + town on.* hace un montón de tiempo = yonks.* montones = oodles, scores.* montones de = mountain(s) of, scores of, lashings of.* un montón = like crazy, like mad.* un montón de = a pile of, a stack of, a bundle of, a truckload of, a sackful of, a raft of.* un montón de dinero = a huge amount of money.* valer un montón = cost + a bundle.* * *1 (pila) pileestá en ese montón de libros it's in that pile o stack of booksroba una carta del montón take a card from the pileel jardinero hacía montones con la hierba cortada the gardener was piling up the cut grassun montón de basura a trash heapes un escritor de los del montón he's not an outstanding o exceptional writer, he's rather a run-of-the-mill writeres una chica del montón she's (just) an ordinary girl2 ( fam)me duele un montón it hurts like hell ( colloq)me gusta un montón I'm crazy about her/it ( colloq)tiene discos a montones she's got heaps o stacks of records ( colloq)la gente los compra a montones people buy them by the barrelful o cartload* * *
montón sustantivo masculino
◊ del montón (fam) ordinary, averageb) (fam) ( gran cantidad):◊ un montón de gente loads of people (colloq);
me gusta un montón I like her/him/it a lot
montón sustantivo masculino
1 (pila, taco) heap, pile: haz un montón con ellas, make a pile of them
2 (gran cantidad) me duele un montón, it hurts a lot
un montón de, a load of, lots of
♦ Locuciones: familiar del montón, nothing special, ordinary
' montón' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
alrededor
- buena
- bueno
- cargamento
- desparejada
- desparejado
- montaña
- pila
- potingue
- bola
- ropa
- tambache
English:
accumulation
- busywork
- dozen
- drift
- freebie
- heap
- host
- lash out
- load
- mass
- mound
- neat
- ordinary
- penny
- pile
- potted
- pump
- scrapheap
- snowdrift
- squash
- stack
- lot
- middle
- pack
- wad
- wood
* * *montón nm1. [pila] heap, pile;roba dos cartas del montón take two cards from the pile;Famdel montón ordinary, run-of-the-millme gusta un montón I'm mad about him;me duele un montón it hurts like mad;pregúntale a él que sabe un montón de astronomía ask him, he knows loads about astronomy;a montones by the bucketload;tiene dinero a montones she's got loads of money, she's loaded;en verano vienen turistas a montones in summer the place is crawling with tourists* * *m pile, heap;ser del montón fig be average, not stand out;montones de fam piles of fam, loads of fam ;tiene coches a montones she has loads of cars;había gente a montones there were loads of people;me gusta un montón fam I’m crazy about him/her fam* * *1) : heap, pileun montón de preguntas: a ton of questionsmontones de gente: loads of people* * *montón n1. (pila) pile2. (cantidad) lots -
89 ordinario
adj.1 ordinary, everyday, common, usual.2 ordinary, common, gross, vulgar.3 third-rate, low-quality, average, low-grade.m.1 uncouth person, common person.2 ordinary.* * *► adjetivo1 (corriente) ordinary, common2 (grosero) vulgar, common\de ordinario usually* * *(f. - ordinaria)adj.1) ordinary2) common* * *1. ADJ1) (=normal) ordinary2) (=vulgar) [persona] common; [comportamiento, modales] coarse2. SM1) (Rel) ordinary2) † (=gastos) daily household expenses pl3) † (=recadero) carrier, delivery man* * *I- ria adjetivo1) ( poco refinado) vulgar, common (pej); ( grosero) rude, bad-mannered; ( en el hablar) vulgar, coarse2) ( de mala calidad) poor o bad quality3) ( no especial) ordinarycorreo ordinario — regular (AmE) o (BrE) normal delivery
4)IIde ordinario — usually, normally
- ria masculino, femenino ( persona - poco refinada) vulgar o (pej) common person; (- grosera) rude o bad-mannered person* * *= run-of-the-mill, plebeian [plebian], vulgar, uncouth, tasteless, naff.Ex. Guides are almost always worth thinking of as the first type of bibliography to search when it is a quick check of run-of-the-mill bibliographical facts which is required.Ex. I don't feel partial either way but if I were a public librarian I think I would take exception to the idea that there was some kind of common plebeian form which I could use.Ex. This paper is a somewhat whimsical glance backwards, recalling 6 vulgar American parodies of 7 enduring songs.Ex. All the writers chosen characterized eastern Europe throughout the 18th century as uncouth and backward.Ex. Of the hundreds of figurines currently on the market, here are the most bizarrely tasteless.Ex. Elton then started to metamorphose from 'sensitive guy' singer into someone famous for wearing naff sunglasses and dressing up as a duck.----* acciones ordinarias = common stock.* hacer ordinario = coarsen.* * *I- ria adjetivo1) ( poco refinado) vulgar, common (pej); ( grosero) rude, bad-mannered; ( en el hablar) vulgar, coarse2) ( de mala calidad) poor o bad quality3) ( no especial) ordinarycorreo ordinario — regular (AmE) o (BrE) normal delivery
4)IIde ordinario — usually, normally
- ria masculino, femenino ( persona - poco refinada) vulgar o (pej) common person; (- grosera) rude o bad-mannered person* * *= run-of-the-mill, plebeian [plebian], vulgar, uncouth, tasteless, naff.Ex: Guides are almost always worth thinking of as the first type of bibliography to search when it is a quick check of run-of-the-mill bibliographical facts which is required.
Ex: I don't feel partial either way but if I were a public librarian I think I would take exception to the idea that there was some kind of common plebeian form which I could use.Ex: This paper is a somewhat whimsical glance backwards, recalling 6 vulgar American parodies of 7 enduring songs.Ex: All the writers chosen characterized eastern Europe throughout the 18th century as uncouth and backward.Ex: Of the hundreds of figurines currently on the market, here are the most bizarrely tasteless.Ex: Elton then started to metamorphose from 'sensitive guy' singer into someone famous for wearing naff sunglasses and dressing up as a duck.* acciones ordinarias = common stock.* hacer ordinario = coarsen.* * *A (poco refinado) vulgar, common ( pej); (grosero) rude, bad-mannered, uncouth; (en la manera de hablar) vulgar, coarseB (de mala calidad) poor o bad qualityuna tela ordinaria a poor-quality materialun vino ordinario a very average wineC (no especial) ordinaryserán sometidos a juicio ordinario they will be tried in a civil courtDde ordinario usually, normallyde ordinario está cerrado a estas horas it's usually o normally closed at this timehay menos gente que de ordinario there are fewer people than usual o normalmasculine, feminine* * *
ordinario◊ - ria adjetivo
1 ( poco refinado) vulgar, common (pej);
( grosero) rude, bad-mannered;
( en el hablar) vulgar, coarse
2 ( de mala calidad) poor o bad quality
3 ( no especial) ordinary;◊ correo ordinario regular (AmE) o (BrE) normal delivery
4
hay menos gente que de ordinario there are fewer people than usual o normal
■ sustantivo masculino, femenino ( persona — poco refinada) vulgar o (pej) common person;
(— grosera) rude o bad-mannered person
ordinario,-a
I adjetivo
1 (habitual) ordinary, common, usual
2 (mediocre) (material, tejido) poor quality
(película, café) average
3 (basto, grosero) vulgar, common: contó un chiste bastante ordinario, he told a joke that was quite gross
II sustantivo masculino y femenino common person
' ordinario' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
común
- ordinaria
- chusco
English:
coarse
- common
- crude
- naff
- vulgar
- cheap
- foul
* * *ordinario, -a♦ adj1. [común] ordinary, usual;están más callados que de ordinario they're quieter than usual;de ordinario la veo todos los días I usually o normally see her every day2. [vulgar] coarse, vulgar3. [no selecto] unexceptional;[de poca calidad] poor-quality, cheap4.tribunal ordinario court of first instance♦ nm,fcommon o coarse person;es un ordinario he's terribly coarse o vulgar♦ nmRel Ordinary* * *adj1 ordinary;de ordinario usually, ordinarily2 despvulgar* * *1) : ordinary2) : coarse, common, vulgar3)de ordinario : usually* * *ordinario adj1. (vulgar) vulgar / common2. (corriente) ordinary / normal -
90 обикновен
ordinary, usual, common (place); normal, average(редови) rank and file(за човек) ordinary(за работа) ordinary, usual(прост) plain(среден, обикновен средна работа) middling(необработен, не от високо качество) coarse(известен) familiarобикновен (работен) ден a normal (working-)dayобикновен език common/ordinary/normal speechобикновен гражданин an ordinary citizenобикновеният (средният) човек the man in the streetобикновен наблюдател a mere spectatorобикновен читател a general/an ordinary readerобикновен разговор common conversationобикновен медицински преглед a routine medical examinationобикновена дроб мат. a simple/common/vulgar fractionобикновена сол common saltобикновено нещо a usual thing, a common occurrence/experienceтова е нещо обикновено it's all in the day's workобикновено явление common practiceв обикновеното време at the ordinary timeобикновени хора ordinary/plain/common people; common run of menобикновени съществувания ordinary livesобикновени войници rank and fileобикновени оръжия conventional arms* * *обикновѐн,прил. ordinary, usual, common(place); normal, average, workaday; разг. common or garden; ( редови) rank and file; (за човек) ordinary; (за работа) ordinary, usual; ( прост) plain; ( среден, “ средна работа”) middling; ( необработен, не от високо качество) coarse; ( известен) familiar; най-\обикновен trivial, run-of-the-mill; най-\обикновен човек a very ordinary kind of man; нещо \обикновено сега a normal procedure in these days; \обикновен ( работен) ден normal (working-)day; \обикновен медицински преглед routine medical examination; \обикновен наблюдател mere spectator; \обикновен разговор common conversation; \обикновен читател general/ordinary reader; \обикновена дроб мат. simple/common/vulgar fraction; \обикновена сол common salt; \обикновени войници rank and file; \обикновени оръжия conventional arms; \обикновени хора ordinary/plain/common people; common run of men; разг. the grass roots; \обикновеният ( средният) човек the man in the street; \обикновено мнозинство simple majority; \обикновено нещо usual thing, common occurrence/experience; \обикновено явление common practice; това е нещо \обикновено it’s all in the day’s work.* * *ordinary: обикновен citizen - обикновен гражданин; average: He lives in an обикновен flat. - Той живее в обикновен апартамент.; usual: обикновен people - обикновени хора; merе (пренебр.); commonplace; everyday{.evridei}; homely; matter-of-fact; routine{ru`ti;n}; trite; unaffected; wont{wOnt}; workaday* * *1. (за работа) ordinary, usual 2. (за човек) ordinary 3. (известен) familiar 4. (необработен, не от високо качество) coarse 5. (прост) plain 6. (редови) rank and file 7. (среден, ОБИКНОВЕНсредна работа") middling 8. -и войници rank and file 9. ordinary, usual, common(place);normal, average 10. ОБИКНОВЕН (работен) ден a normal (working-)day 11. ОБИКНОВЕН гражданин an ordinary citizen 12. ОБИКНОВЕН език common/ ordinary/normal speech 13. ОБИКНОВЕН медицински преглед a routine medical examination 14. ОБИКНОВЕН наблюдател a mere spectator 15. ОБИКНОВЕН разговор common conversation 16. ОБИКНОВЕН читател a general/an ordinary reader 17. ОБИКНОВЕНa сол common salt 18. ОБИКНОВЕНa. дроб мат. a simple/ common/vulgar fraction 19. ОБИКНОВЕНo нещо a usual thing, a common occurrence/experience 20. ОБИКНОВЕНo явление common practice 21. ОБИКНОВЕНи оръжия conventional arms 22. ОБИКНОВЕНи съществувания ordinary lives 23. ОБИКНОВЕНи хора ordinary/plain/common people;common run of men 24. ОБИКНОВЕНият (средният) човек the man in the street 25. в ОБИКНОВЕНото време at the ordinary time 26. най- ОБИКНОВЕН човек a very ordinary kind of man 27. най-ОБИКНОВЕН trivial, run-of-the-mill 28. най-ОБИКНОВЕНа стая a very ordinary room 29. нещо ОБИКНОВЕНо сега a normal procedure in these days 30. това е нещо ОБИКНОВЕНо it's all in the day's work -
91 moliente
adj.1 grinder, grinding.Moliente y corriente (coll.) right, justly, exactly2 milling, grinding.* * *corriente y moliente run of the mill, common or garden* * ** * *----* corriente y moliente = run-of-the-mill.* * ** corriente y moliente = run-of-the-mill.* * ** * *moliente adjFamcorriente y moliente run-of-the-mill -
92 regular
adj.1 regular (uniforme).de un modo regular regularlyTiene ritmo regular It has a repetitive rhythm.Ricardo es un cliente regular Richard is a frequent customer.Su rutina es regular His routine is regular.2 average, fair (mediocre).María es una estudiante regular Mary is an average student.3 normal, usual (normal).por lo regular as a rule, generally4 fairly good, not bad, not too bad not too good, fairly decent.El pastel estuvo regular The cake was so-so.adv.so-so (no muy bien).lleva unos días regular, tiene un poco de fiebre she's been so-so the last few days, she's got a bit of a temperature¿qué tal el concierto? — regular how was the concert? — nothing specialf. & m.regular customer.Ricardo es un regular de la tienda Richard is a regular customer in the store.m.regular (military).v.to control, to regulate.la normativa regula estos casos the regulations govern these casesElsa regula las actividades Elsa regulates the activities.Elsa regula el agua caliente Elsa regulates the hot water.* * *► adjetivo1 (gen) regular■ ¿qué tal la película? - regular what's the film like? - nothing special1 (gen) to regulate2 (ajustar) to adjust* * *1. adj.1) regular2) fair2. verb* * *IADJ1) (=normal) normal, usual2) (=común) ordinarypor lo regular — as a rule, generally
3) (=uniforme) regular4) (=mediano) medium, averagede tamaño regular — medium-sized, average-sized
5) (=no muy bueno) so-so, not too bad-¿qué tal la fiesta? -regular — "what was the party like?" - "it was O.K. o all right o not too bad"
-¿qué tal estás? -regular — "how are you?" - "so-so o all right o can't complain"
6) (Rel, Mil) regularIIVT1) (=ajustar) to regulate, control; [ley] to govern; [+ tráfico, precio] to control2) (Mec) to adjust, regulate; [+ reloj] to put right; [+ despertador] to set3) Méx (=calcular) to calculate* * *I1)a) <ritmo/movimiento> regularb) < verbo> regularc) (Mat) regular2)por lo regular — (loc adv) as a (general) rule
3)a) ( no muy bien)¿qué tal te va? - regular — how's it going? - so-so
¿qué tal la película? - regular — how was the movie? - nothing special
b) ( de tamaño) medium-sized, middlingIIverbo transitivo1)a) <espejo/asiento> to adjustb) <caudal/temperatura/velocidad> to regulate, control2) ley/norma to regulateIIImasculino ( calificación) fair* * *= even, moderate, regular, regulate, routine, steady [steadier -comp., steadiest -sup.], standing order, recurring, line + Profesión, standing, habitual.Ex. An unvarying level of illumination, heating, cooling, ventilation and acoustics will give the even type of environment needed in an academic library.Ex. In his efforts to broaden the tax base, Groome has been actively courting industry - with some moderate success.Ex. Book form was generally regarded as too inflexible for library catalogues, especially where the catalogue required regular updating to cater for continuing and gradual expansion of the collection.Ex. Built into each operator are sets of instructions to the computer which regulate where the term must appear in the printed entries generated from the string, typefaces, and necessary punctuation.Ex. They were a kind of localized office for the city government and would take on routine tasks like receiving license applications, although main function was to provide information.Ex. Susan Blanch is a fairly steady customer, taking only fiction books.Ex. A dynamic information centre has to satisfy 2 types of enquiry -- single requests for information and enquiries on standing order -- each contributing to and shaping the information network.Ex. After the probationary period, performance evaluations are administered on a recurring basis.Ex. In larger libraries, line librarians are also likely to be MLS graduates.Ex. A standing reproach to all librarians is the non-user.Ex. A new study confirms that male gender, obesity, and weight gain are key determinants of habitual snoring in the adult population.----* campo petrolífero de producción regular = marginal field.* de forma regular = regularly.* de un modo regular = on an ongoing basis, on a continuing basis.* de venta regular = steady-selling.* ejército regular, el = regular army, the.* * *I1)a) <ritmo/movimiento> regularb) < verbo> regularc) (Mat) regular2)por lo regular — (loc adv) as a (general) rule
3)a) ( no muy bien)¿qué tal te va? - regular — how's it going? - so-so
¿qué tal la película? - regular — how was the movie? - nothing special
b) ( de tamaño) medium-sized, middlingIIverbo transitivo1)a) <espejo/asiento> to adjustb) <caudal/temperatura/velocidad> to regulate, control2) ley/norma to regulateIIImasculino ( calificación) fair* * *= even, moderate, regular, regulate, routine, steady [steadier -comp., steadiest -sup.], standing order, recurring, line + Profesión, standing, habitual.Ex: An unvarying level of illumination, heating, cooling, ventilation and acoustics will give the even type of environment needed in an academic library.
Ex: In his efforts to broaden the tax base, Groome has been actively courting industry - with some moderate success.Ex: Book form was generally regarded as too inflexible for library catalogues, especially where the catalogue required regular updating to cater for continuing and gradual expansion of the collection.Ex: Built into each operator are sets of instructions to the computer which regulate where the term must appear in the printed entries generated from the string, typefaces, and necessary punctuation.Ex: They were a kind of localized office for the city government and would take on routine tasks like receiving license applications, although main function was to provide information.Ex: Susan Blanch is a fairly steady customer, taking only fiction books.Ex: A dynamic information centre has to satisfy 2 types of enquiry -- single requests for information and enquiries on standing order -- each contributing to and shaping the information network.Ex: After the probationary period, performance evaluations are administered on a recurring basis.Ex: In larger libraries, line librarians are also likely to be MLS graduates.Ex: A standing reproach to all librarians is the non-user.Ex: A new study confirms that male gender, obesity, and weight gain are key determinants of habitual snoring in the adult population.* campo petrolífero de producción regular = marginal field.* de forma regular = regularly.* de un modo regular = on an ongoing basis, on a continuing basis.* de venta regular = steady-selling.* ejército regular, el = regular army, the.* * *A1 (uniforme) ‹ritmo/movimiento› regulara intervalos regulares at regular intervalsla asistencia regular a clase regular attendance at classtiene el pulso regular her pulse is regular2 ‹verbo› regular3 ( Mat) regularpolígono regular regular polygonB (normal) regular, ordinaryviajé en un vuelo regular I traveled* on a normal o scheduled flightiban vestidos con el uniforme regular they were wearing their ordinary uniformCpor lo regular ( loc adv) as a (general) rulepor lo regular, no trabaja los sábados he doesn't work on Saturdays as a rule, he doesn't usually work on SaturdaysD1(no muy bien): ¿qué tal van los estudios? — regular how's school going? — so-so¿qué tal la película? — regular how was the movie? — nothing special o nothing to write home aboutsu trabajo está bastante regularcillo the work he produces is pretty run-of-the-mill2 (mediano) medium-sized, middlingvtA1 (ajustar) ‹espejo/asiento› to adjust2 ‹caudal› to regulate, control; ‹temperatura/velocidad› to regulate, controlB «ley/norma» to regulatelas leyes que regulan la industria the laws regulating the industryfair* * *
regular 1 adjetivo
1 ( en general) regular
2a) ( no muy bien):◊ ¿qué tal te va? — regular how's it going? — so-so;
¿qué tal la película? — regular how was the movie? — nothing special
■ sustantivo masculino ( calificación) fair
regular 2 ( conjugate regular) verbo transitivo
1
2 [ley/norma] to regulate
regular
I adjetivo
1 regular
un ejército regular, a regular army
2 (metódico, sin alteraciones) la marcha regular de los acontecimientos, the orderly progress of events
3 (habitual) regular
4 (mediano) average, regular
(mediocre) average
II adverbio so-so
III verbo transitivo
1 (organizar, someter a normas) to regulate, control
2 (ajustar) to adjust
' regular' also found in these entries:
Spanish:
ahorcarse
- asidua
- asiduo
- bribón
- bribona
- dosificar
- habitual
- milicia
- once
- parroquiana
- parroquiano
- periodicidad
- roce
- vuelo
- café
- cliente
- controlar
- fijo
- gasolina
- graduación
- graduar
- normal
- ordinario
English:
adjust
- average
- control
- lie
- moderate
- much
- regular
- regular army
- regulate
- scheduled flight
- second-class
- so-so
- spot-check
- steady
- assure
- casual
- clock
- even
- flier
- routine
- scheduled
- second
- shuttle
* * *♦ adj1. [uniforme] regular;de un modo regular regularly;hay un servicio de autobús regular a la capital there is a regular bus service to the capital2. [mediocre] average;una actuación regular an undistinguished o a rather average performance3. [normal] normal, usual;[de tamaño] medium;por lo regular as a rule, generally4. Gram regular5. Geom regular6. Rel regular♦ nmMil regular♦ adv[no muy bien] so-so;lleva unos días regular, tiene un poco de fiebre she's been so-so the last few days, she's got a bit of a temperature;me encuentro regular I feel a bit under the weather;¿qué tal el concierto? – regular how was the concert? – so-so o nothing specialregular2 vt1. [actividad, economía] to regulate;la normativa regula estos casos the regulations govern these cases2. [mecanismo] to adjust;[temperatura] to regulate, to control; [tráfico] to control;las presas regulan el cauce del río the dams regulate the flow of the river* * *1 adj2 ( común) ordinary3 ( habitual) regular, normal2 v/t TÉC regulate; temperatura control, regulate* * *regular vt: to regulate, to controlregular adj1) : regular2) : fair, OK, so-so3) : medium, average4)por lo regular : in general, generally* * *regular1 adj1. (en general) regular2. (mediocre) average / poorregular2 adv all rightregular3 vb to regulate -
93 sıra
"1. row; line; queue; file. 2. order, sequence. 3. turn: Sıra sende. It´s your turn. 4. the right time to...: Şimdi denize girmenin tam sırası. Now´s just the right time for a dip in the sea. Şimdi sırası değil. This isn´t the right time. 5. point, moment, time: O sırada öğretmen geldi. At that point the teacher came in. Çiçekleri suladığım sırada telefon çaldı. The telephone rang while I was watering the flowers. 6. bench. 7. desk (in a school classroom). 8. (things) placed in a row: sıra ağaçlar trees planted in a row. 9. of all shapes and sizes: sıra portakalı oranges of all shapes and sizes. -dan ordinary; middling, mediocre, run-of-the-mill. -sında 1. at the right time, when the time is ripe. 2. in the course of, during: ders sırasında during the lesson. -sıyla 1. (doing something) at the right time. 2. sequentially, in sequence, in order, respectively: Bahriye ile Fahriye, sırasıyla altmış ve yetmiş yaşlarındadır. Bahriye and Fahriye are respectively sixty and seventy years old. -yla each in turn; one by one. -sını beklemek to wait one´s turn. - dayağı beating given to each person in a group in turn. - evler row houses, terrace. (adam/insan) -sına geçmek to be regarded as a decent person (when he is actually a complete scoundrel). -sı gelmişken Now that the time seems ripe...: Sırası gelmişken bunu yapalım. Let´s do this, now that the time seems ripe. -sına/-sını getirmek to find a suitable opportunity. -sına göre when it´s right or appropriate to do so: İnsan sırasına göre susmasını da bilmeli. A person should also know when he ought to keep quiet. - gözetmek/kollamak to wait for a suitable moment. -sını kaybetmek (for a baby) to get out of its normal routine of feeding and sleeping. -ya koymak /ı/ to get (something) properly organized or arranged. -sına koymak /ı/ to regard (someone) as being in (a certain) category. - malı 1. run-of-the-mill, middling, mediocre (things). 2. run-of-the-mill things. - sayı sıfatı gram. ordinal number. - sıra row upon row of: sıra sıra çamlar row upon row of pines. - sütunlar arch. colonnade." -
94 corriente4
4 = ordinary, plain [plainer -comp., plainest -sup.], run-of-the-mill, everyday.Ex. Control is exercised over which terms are used, but otherwise the terms are ordinary words.Ex. He went on to explain that while there were no unsightly slums, there was a fairly large district of rather nondescript homes intermingled with plain two- and three-family brick and frame dwellings, principally in the eastern reaches of the city.Ex. Guides are almost always worth thinking of as the first type of bibliography to search when it is a quick check of run-of-the-mill bibliographical facts which is required.Ex. We have too much invested, and the new systems too intimately integrated into the everyday operation of the library, for us to assume any longer that we can temper their influence on emerging standards.----* al corriente = in step, paid-up, in good standing.* al corriente de = in step with.* catalogación corriente = current cataloguing.* común y corriente = unremarkable.* corriente y moliente = run-of-the-mill.* cuenta corriente = current account, checking account, deposit account.* día corriente = ordinary day.* estar al corriente = monitor + developments.* gente común y corriente, la = common people, the.* gente corriente, la = ordinary people.* hombre corriente, el = common man, the.* mantenerse al corriente = keep + current.* mantenerse al corriente de = keep + abreast of, stay + abreast of.* normal y corriente = unremarkable.* ponerse al corriente = come up to + speed.* ponerse al corriente de = catch up with, catch up on.* puesta al corriente = update [up-date]. -
95 это хорошие книги, а не чтиво
1) General subject: these books are not the usual ( ordinary) run-of-the-mill stuffУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > это хорошие книги, а не чтиво
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96 commun
commun, e1 [kɔmœ̃, yn]1. adjectivea. ( = collectif, de tous) common ; ( = fait ensemble) [décision, effort, réunion] jointb. ( = partagé) [élément] common ; [pièce, cuisine] communalc. ( = comparable) [goût, intérêt, caractère] commond. ( = ordinaire) [erreur] common ; [opinion] commonly helde. (pejorative = vulgaire) common2. masculine noun* * *
1.
commune kɔmœ̃, yn adjectif1) ( venant de plusieurs personnes) [travail, œuvre] collaborative; [désir, accord, conception] common; [candidat, politique, projet] joint (épith)2) ( appartenant à plusieurs) [pièce, équipement, souvenirs] shared; [langue, passé] common; [biens] joint (épith)3) ( semblable) [intérêts, traits] common (à to); [ambition, objectifs] sharedles événements d'hier sont sans commune mesure avec les précédents — yesterday's events are on an altogether different scale from previous ones
4) ( courant) common5) ( ordinaire) pej [goût, personne] common péj; [visage] plainc'est/il est d'un commun! — it's/he's so common!
2.
nom masculin ordinary
3.
en commun locution adverbiale [écrire, produire] jointly, togethermettre ses moyens or ressources en commun — to pool one's resources
4.
* * *kɔmœ̃, yn commun, -e1. adj1) (problème, intérêts, passion) common, (amis) mutualNous avons des intérêts communs. — We have interests in common., We have common interests.
Je l'ai appris par des amis communs. — I heard it from mutual friends.
Ils ont beaucoup de points communs. — They have a lot in common.
c'est sans commune mesure avec... — there's no possible comparison with...
2) (pièce, services) communal, sharedSee:être commun à [pièce, services] — to be shared by
3) (réunion, effort, travail) jointIls ont décidé d'un commun accord d'abandonner le projet. — They decided by mutual agreement to drop the project.
4) (= courant) (fait, plante) common, commonplaceCe genre de problème est tout à fait commun. — This kind of problem is very common., This kind of problem is very commonplace.
5) péjoratif (manières, personne) commonSee:2. nm1)2)avoir en commun [intérêts] — to have in common
Ils n'ont rien en commun. — They've got nothing in common.
mettre en commun [biens, services] — to share, [ressources] to pool
Nous mettons tous nos livres en commun. — We share all our books.
3. communs nmpl(= bâtiments) outbuildings4. nfSee:* * *A adj1 ( venant de plusieurs personnes) [travail, œuvre] collaborative; [désir, volonté, accord, préoccupation, conception] common; [candidat, politique, projet, revendication, stratégie] joint ( épith); d'un commun accord by mutual agreement;2 ( appartenant à plusieurs) [cour, pièce, équipement, fonds, souvenirs, expérience] shared; [ami] mutual; [ancêtre, langue, passé, dénominateur, facteur] common; [biens] joint ( épith); nous avons des amis communs we have mutual friends, we have friends in common; pour le bien commun for the common good; dans l'intérêt commun in the common interest; la cuisine est commune aux locataires the kitchen is shared by the tenants; époux communs en biens Jur couple who have become joint owners of property through marriage; après dix ans de vie commune after living together for ten years;3 ( semblable) [caractéristiques, intérêts, traits] common (à to); [ambition, objectifs] shared; une politique commune aux deux partis a policy common to both parties; n'avoir plus rien de commun avec qch/qn no longer to have anything in common with sth/sb; les événements d'hier sont sans commune mesure avec les précédents yesterday's events are on an altogether different scale from previous ones;4 ( courant) [attitude, opinion, faute, maladie, espèce] common; il est commun de faire it's common to do; ce n'est pas un prénom très commun that's a rather unusual name; elle est d'une beauté peu commune she's uncommonly beautiful;5 ( ordinaire) pej [goût, personne] common péj; [visage] plain; c'est/il est d'un commun! it's/he's so common!B nm ordinary; sortir du commun to be out of the ordinary; les gens du commun ordinary people; le commun des mortels ordinary ou common mortals (pl); le commun des auditeurs/lecteurs the ordinary listener/reader; tomber dans le commun to become commonplace ou run-of-the-mill; hors du commun exceptional.C en commun loc adv [écrire, travailler, produire] jointly, together; prendre ses repas en commun to eat together; avoir qch en commun to have sth in common (avec qn with sb); mettre ses moyens or ressources en commun to pool one's resources; nous mettons tout en commun we share everything.E commune nf1 Admin ( village) village; ( ville) town, district; dans la commune de Melay in the village of Melay;2 Hist la Commune (de Paris) the (Paris) Commune.ⓘ Commune The smallest administrative unit, headed by a maire and a conseil municipal. Each village, town and city is a commune, of which there are 36,000 nationwide.( féminin commune) [kɔmœ̃, yn] adjectifle court de tennis est commun à tous les propriétaires the tennis court is the common property of all the residents[en communauté]la vie commune [conjugale] conjugal life, the life of a couplenous avons des problèmes communs we share the same problems, we have similar problemsil n'y a pas de commune mesure entre... there's no similarity whatsoever between...c'est sans commune mesure avec... there's no comparison with...il est d'un courage peu commun he's uncommonly ou exceptionally bravecommun nom masculinun homme hors du commun an exceptional ou unusual man————————communs nom masculin plurield'un commun accord locution adverbialetous d'un commun accord ont décidé que... they decided unanimously that...————————en commun locution adverbiale -
97 courir
courir [kuʀiʀ]➭ TABLE 111. intransitive verba. to run ; (Automobiles, cycling) to race• entrer/sortir en courant to run in/outb. ( = se précipiter) to rush• pour enlever les taches, tu peux toujours courir (inf) if you think you'll get rid of those stains you've got another think coming (inf)• les épinards, je ne cours pas après (inf) I'm not that keen on spinach• courir sur le système or le haricot à qn (inf!) to get on sb's nerves (inf)d. [nuages, reflets] to race ; [eau] to rushe. ( = se répandre) le bruit court que... rumour has it that...f. [intérêt] to accrue ; [bail] to run2. transitive verba. (Sport) [+ épreuve] to compete inb. ( = s'exposer à) courir de grands dangers to be in great dangerc. ( = parcourir) [+ magasins, bureaux] to go round• des gens comme lui, ça ne court pas les rues (inf) there aren't many like himd. ( = fréquenter) courir les filles to chase the girls* * *kuʀiʀ
1.
1) Sport to compete in [épreuve]2) ( parcourir en tous sens)courir la campagne/les océans/le monde — to roam the countryside/the oceans/the world
3) ( fréquenter)courir les boutiques — to go round the shops GB ou stores US
4) ( s'exposer à)faire courir un (grand) danger à quelqu'un/quelque chose — to put somebody/something in (serious) danger
5) (colloq) ( chercher à séduire)courir les filles/garçons — to chase after girls/boys
2.
verbe intransitif1) gén [personne, animal] to run‘va chercher ton frère’ - ‘j'y cours’ — ‘go and get your brother’ - ‘I'm going’
les voleurs courent toujours — fig the thieves are still at large
courir sur une balle — ( au tennis) to run for a ball
3) ( se presser) [personne] to rushen courant — hastily, in a rush
courir (tout droit) à la catastrophe/faillite — to be heading (straight) for disaster/bankruptcy
4) ( chercher à rattraper)courir après quelqu'un/quelque chose — gén to run after somebody/something; ( poursuivre) to chase after [voleur, gloire]
s'il ne veut pas me voir je ne vais pas lui courir après — fig if he doesn't want to see me I'm not going to go chasing after him
5) ( se mouvoir rapidement) [ruisseau] to rush ( dans through); [nuages, flammes] to race ( dans across)6) ( parcourir)courir le long de — [sentier] to run along; [veine] to run down
7) ( se propager) [rumeur] to go aroundc'est un bruit qui court — it's a rumour [BrE]
faire courir un bruit — to spread a rumour [BrE]
8) ( être en vigueur) [intérêts] to accrue; [bail, contrat] to run ( jusqu'à to)9) ( s'écouler)le mois/l'année qui court — the current ou present month/year
10) [navire] to run, to sail••tu peux toujours courir! — (colloq) you can go whistle for it! (colloq)
laisser courir — (colloq) to let things ride
laisse courir! — (colloq) forget it!
* * *kuʀiʀ1. vi1) (pour fuir, par jeu) to runElle a traversé la rue en courant. — She ran across the street.
courir après qn — to run after sb, to chase sb
2) (en compétition) to run3) (se dépêcher) to rushÇa ne sert à rien de courir. — There's no point in rushing.
4) [rumeurs] to go round5) COMMERCE, [intérêt] to accruetu peux courir!; tu peux toujours courir! — you've got a hope!
2. vt1) SPORT, [épreuve] to compete in2) [risque] to run, [danger] to face3)* * *courir verb table: courirA vtr1 Sport [athlète] to run (in) [épreuve, marathon]; [cycliste] to ride in [épreuve]; [pilote] to drive in [rallye, course]; [cheval] to run in [épreuve]; courir le relais/100 mètres to run (in) the relay/100 metresGB;2 ( parcourir en tous sens) courir la campagne/les océans/le monde to roam the countryside/the oceans/the world; j'ai couru tout Paris pour trouver ton cadeau I searched the whole of Paris for your present; courir les boutiques to go round the shops GB ou stores US;3 ( fréquenter) courir les cocktails/bals/théâtres to do the rounds of the cocktail parties/dances/theatresGB;4 ( s'exposer à) courir un (grand) danger to be in (great) danger; faire courir un (grand) danger à qn/qch to put sb/sth in (serious) danger; courir un (gros) risque to run a (big) risk; je ne veux courir aucun risque I don't want to run any risks; courir le risque de faire to run the risk of doing; faire courir un risque à qn to put sb at risk; c'est un risque à courir it's a risk one has to take;5 ◑( agacer) courir qn to get on sb's nerves ou wick○ GB; tu nous cours avec tes histoires! you're getting on our nerves with your stories!;B vi1 gén [personne, animal] to run; courir dans le couloir/dans les escaliers to run in the corridor/on the stairs; courir à travers champs/à travers bois to run across the fields/through the woods; courir vite ( ponctuellement) to run fast; ( en général) to be a fast runner; je ne cours pas vite I can't run very fast; ils courent tous les samedis ( en jogging) they go for a run ou go jogging every Saturday; sortir en courant to run out; se mettre à courir to start running; courir vers or à qn to run toward(s) sb; cours chercher de l'aide/ton père run and get help/your father; je cours leur dire/les prévenir I'll run and tell them/warn them; ‘va chercher ton frère’-‘j'y cours’ ‘go and get your brother’-‘I'm going’; tout le monde court voir leur spectacle everybody is rushing to see their show; qu'est-ce qui vous fait courir? fig what makes you tick○?; les voleurs courent toujours fig the thieves are still at large;2 Sport ( en athlétisme) to run; ( en cyclisme) to ride, to race; (en voiture, moto) to race; ( en équitation) to run; courir sur to race with [nom de marque]; to race on [nom de véhicule]; courir au grand prix du Japon to race in the Japanese Grand Prix; on court à Vincennes cet après-midi Turf there's a race meeting at Vincennes this afternoon; courir sur une balle ( au tennis) to run for a ball;3 ( se presser) [personne] to rush; j'ai couru toute la journée I've been rushing about all day; elle court sans arrêt she's always rushing about, she's always on the go; courir au secours de qn to rush to sb's aid; en courant hastily, in a rush; courir (tout droit) à la catastrophe/faillite to be heading (straight) for disaster/bankruptcy;4 ( chercher à rattraper) courir après qn/qch gén to run after sb/sth; ( poursuivre) to chase after sb/sth; ton chien m'a couru après your dog chased after me; courir après un voleur to chase after a thief; s'il ne veut pas me voir je ne vais pas lui courir après fig if he doesn't want to see me I'm not going to go chasing after him; ⇒ valoir;5 ( essayer d'obtenir) courir après qch to chase after sth; courir après les honneurs/le succès/la gloire to chase after honourGB/success/glory;6 ○( essayer de séduire) courir après qn to chase after sb; il te court après he's chasing after you;7 ○( apprécier) ne pas courir après qch not to be wild about sth○; le chou, je ne cours pas après I'm not wild about cabbage○;8 ( se mouvoir rapidement) [ruisseau, torrent] to rush, to run (dans through); [flammes] to run, to race; [nuages] to race (dans across); ses doigts courent sur le clavier his/her fingers race over the keyboard; ma plume court sur la feuille my pen is racing across the page; laisser courir sa plume or son stylo (sur le papier) to let one's pen run ou race across the page;9 ( parcourir) courir le long de [sentier] to run along [bois, pré]; [veine, varice] to run down [jambe]; les lignes qui courent sur la paume de la main the lines that run across the palm;10 ( se propager) [rumeur, bruit] to go around; il y a un bruit qui court à leur sujet there's a rumourGB going around about them; le bruit court que rumourGB has it (that), there's a rumourGB that; c'est un bruit qui court it's a rumourGB; faire courir un bruit to spread a rumourGB;11 ( être en vigueur) [intérêts] to accrue; [bail, contrat] to run (jusqu'à to);13 Naut [navire] to run, to sail.C se courir vpr1 ( avoir lieu) [tiercé, course à pied] to be run; [course de voiture, moto] to take place;2 ( chercher à se rattraper) se courir après to chase (after) each other; arrêtez de vous courir après dans la maison! stop chasing each other around the house!;3 ○( se chercher) se courir après to look for each other.tu peux toujours courir○! you can go whistle for it○!; laisser courir○ to let things ride; laisse courir, tu vois bien qu'il le fait exprès forget it, can't you see he's doing it on purpose?; rien ne sert de courir il faut partir à point Prov slow and steady wins the race Prov.[kurir] verbe intransitif1. [généralement] to runentrer/sortir/traverser en courant to run in/out/acrossmonter/descendre l'escalier en courant to run up/down the stairsj'ai couru à fond de train ou à toutes jambes I ran as fast as my legs could carry mej'ai couru toute la journée I've been in a rush ou I've been run off my feet all day4. [se propager - rumeur, idée]le bruit court que... rumour has it that...5. [temps]6. [s'étendre]courir le long de [rivière, voie ferrée] to run ou to stretch along8. (locution)laisse courir! drop it!, forget it!courir sur le système (très familier) ou le haricot (très familier) à quelqu'un [l'énerver] to get up somebody's nose (UK) ou on somebody's nerves————————[kurir] verbe transitifcela court les rues [idée, style] it's run-of-the-millquelqu'un comme ça, ça ne court pas les rues people like that are hard to come by3. [fréquenter] to go roundcourir les filles/les garçons to chase girls/boyscourir le jupon ou le cotillon to be a womaniser4. [rechercher - honneurs, poste] to seek[encourir]faire courir un risque ou danger à quelqu'un to put somebody at risk[tenter]il ne faut pas courir deux lièvres à la fois (proverbe) if you run after two hares you will catch neither (proverbe)————————courir à verbe plus préposition[faillite, désastre] to be heading for————————courir après verbe plus préposition[rechercher]————————courir sur verbe plus préposition[approcher de]————————se courir verbe pronominal (emploi passif) -
98 простой
1) General subject: ABC, a member of the public (человек), aboriginal, artless, austere, babyish, bald, bare, base, chaste, childlike, coarse, common, dead time (на работе), dolly, down time, down-home, easy, elegant (о формулировке, научном определении и т.п.), elementary, facile, foolproof, gross (о пище), groundling, haplo, home bred, home made, home-bred, homely, homespun, honest, humble, idlesse, informal, infrangible, ingenuous, lay up, lay-up (машины), mere, mobbish, native, no frills, no-frills, onefold, open and shut, open-and-shut, ordinary, outage, penny plain, penny-plain, plain, poor, primitive, profane, pure (о стиле), racy of the soil, rough, run of the mill, run of the mine, rustic, severe (о стиле, манерах, одежде и т.п.), shirt sleeve, silly, simple, snap, standstill, stoppage, straightforward, tailor made, tailored, tailored (о женской одежде), terre-а-terre, unaffected, unartful, unbending, unceremonious, uncomplicated, uncompounded, unfussy, unmannered, unperplexed, unpretentious, unselfconscious, unsophisticated, (сравнительно) unsophisticated (об оборудовании и т.п.), up country, up-country, vera, very, vulgar, tie-up (договор поставки), simple-minded (характеристика человека без пресловутого камня за пазухой), folksy2) Naval: demurrage (транспортных средств), standing by (судна)4) American: downtime, run-of-the-mill, run-of-the-mine5) Obsolete: russet6) Military: (оборудования) delay, (оборудования) idle time, (оборудования) stoppage7) Engineering: delay, down (оборудования), fault time, idle, idle time, ineffective time, nonuse, out-of-service time, outage time, shutdown, standing time, stopping, time-out, vanilla10) Chemistry: idiotproof11) Construction: wasted time12) Mathematics: breakdown time, idle time (вынужденная остановка), off-time, prime, short, standing idle, tame13) Railway term: idle hours, lay-over16) Economy: lie time, simple (напр. о проценте), standby time, straight, work stoppage17) Accounting: lost time18) Australian slang: cushy19) Automobile industry: ordinary (в противоположность автоматическому), standing, time-out (напр. из-за ремонта)20) Architecture: straightway21) Mining: dead time (на работе), demurrage (при работе), down-time, non-productive time (в работе), standstill (в работе), time-out (в работе)22) Diplomatic term: shirt-sleeve, work stoppages23) Forestry: single-storeyed24) Metallurgy: idle hours (в работе)25) Polygraphy: standstill time26) Scornful: plebeian28) Textile: delay (оборудования), out-of-service time (машины), standing time (машины), waste of time (машины)29) Jargon: square, funky, Mickey Mouse30) Information technology: easy-to-understand31) Oil: dead time (в бурении), down time (в бурении), holdup (бурового станка), idle hour, off-period, shut down33) Advertising: idle capacity34) Patents: single35) Business: idle period, idleness, loss of use, primary, slack36) Drilling: unproductive time37) Oilfield: shut-down (о машинах механизмах)38) Production: dormancy (о производстве)39) EBRD: demurrage (судна или вагона), downtime (отказ оборудования), outage (выход из строя оборудования)40) Polymers: shutdown (оборудования), stoppage (машины)41) Programming: small42) Automation: dead (cycle) time, idle (машины), plain (по конструкции)43) Quality control: (вынужденный) downtime, dwell time, inactive time44) Robots: idle (оборудования), timeout45) Cables: downtime (оборудования)46) Makarov: abecedarian, broken time, common (дроби), downtime (оборудования), home-made, homelike, inartificial, inelaborate, naked, no activity, off, one-fold, shutdown (напр. предприятия, машины), shutdown (напр., предприятия, машины), tailor-made47) Phraseological unit: common-and-garden48) Microsoft: hassle-free49) Trade unions: down-day50) General subject: parsimonious (о модели) -
99 nullachtfuffzehn
nụll|ạcht|fụ̈nf|zehn [nʊl|axt'fʏnftseːn] [nUl|axt'fʊftseːn] (inf)1. adj invrun-of-the-mill (inf)2. advin a run-of-the-mill way* * *null·acht·fuff·zehn[nʊlʔaxtˈfʊftse:n]null·acht·fünf·zehn[ˈnʊlˈʔaxtˈfʏnftse:n]adj (fam) run-of-the-mill -
100 обычный
1) General subject: accustomed, average, common, common or garden, common-or-garden, commonplace, consuetudinary, conventional, copy-book, current, customary, custumal, everyday, familiar, frequent, general, groovy, habitual, honest, informal, knee jerk, mundane, natural, nickel and dime, nickel-and-dimed, nickel-and-diming, nickeled-and-dimed, nickeling-and-diming, normal, outright, primitive, rank-and-file, regular, rife, routine, traditionary, uneventful, unexceptional, wonted, usual, original, non-matching, all-too-familiar, ordinary2) Computers: standard3) Medicine: quotidian4) Dialect: brief (о болезни)5) American: run-of-the-mill, run-of-the-mine6) Military: nonnuclear, (не ядерный) conventional7) Engineering: regular-duty, traditional8) Bookish: nomic9) Mathematics: vulgar10) Religion: Ordinarius ("ordinary", сокр. Ord.)11) Economy: straight12) Automobile industry: orthodox13) Architecture: repeatable15) Physiology: knee-jerk16) Jargon: cut and dried, run of the mill, man-on-the-street, slob17) Ecology: trivial18) Drilling: off-the-shelf19) Polymers: plain20) Programming: straight-through21) Quality control: plain (напр. о конструкции, методе)22) Makarov: of common occurrence, pedestrian, regulation23) Taboo: plebby24) Phraseological unit: common-and-garden (Ordinary, standard.), button-down
См. также в других словарях:
run-of-the-mill — or[run of the mine] {adj.} Of a common kind; ordinary; usual. * /Frank is a very good bowler, but Joe is just run of the mill./ * /It was just a run of the mine movie./ … Dictionary of American idioms
run-of-the-mill — or[run of the mine] {adj.} Of a common kind; ordinary; usual. * /Frank is a very good bowler, but Joe is just run of the mill./ * /It was just a run of the mine movie./ … Dictionary of American idioms
run-of-the-mill — • run of the mill • run of the mine adj Of a common kind; ordinary; usual. Frank is a very good bowler, but Joe is just run of the mill. It was just a run of the mine movie … Словарь американских идиом
run-of-the-mill — /run euhv dheuh mil /, adj. merely average; commonplace; mediocre: just a plain, run of the mill house; a run of the mill performance. [1925 30] Syn. ordinary, routine, everyday. * * * … Universalium
run-of-the-mill — UK US /ˌrʌnəvðəˈmɪl/ adjective ► ordinary and not special or exciting in any way: »The event is not just a run of the mill conference … Financial and business terms
run-of-the-mill — adj not special or interesting in any way = ↑ordinary ▪ a run of the mill performance … Dictionary of contemporary English
run-of-the-mill — If something is run of the mill, there is nothing exceptional about it it is ordinary or average … The small dictionary of idiomes
run-of-the-mill — un of the mill, a. Ordinary; common; unexceptional. [PJC] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
run-of-the-mill — unspectacular, 1909 in a literal sense, in reference to material yielded by a mill, etc., before sorting for quality. Figurative use is from 1922 … Etymology dictionary
run-of-the-mill — [run′əv thə mil′] adj. not special; ordinary; average … English World dictionary
run-of-the-mill — [adj] average common, commonplace, customary, dime a dozen, everyday, fair, fair to middling*, garden variety*, humdrum, intermediate, mainstream, mediocre, medium, middle of the road*, middling, ordinary, regular, routine, so so*,… … New thesaurus