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Ordinary   /ˈɔrdənˌɛri/   Listen
adjective
Ordinary  adj.  
1.
According to established order; methodical; settled; regular. "The ordinary forms of law."
2.
Common; customary; usual. "Method is not less requisite in ordinary conversation that in writing."
3.
Of common rank, quality, or ability; not distinguished by superior excellence or beauty; hence, not distinguished in any way; commonplace; inferior; of little merit; as, men of ordinary judgment; an ordinary book. "An ordinary lad would have acquired little or no useful knowledge in such a way."
Ordinary seaman (Naut.), one not expert or fully skilled, and hence ranking below an able seaman.
Synonyms: Normal; common; usual; customary. See Normal. Ordinary, Common. A thing is common in which many persons share or partake; as, a common practice. A thing is ordinary when it is apt to come round in the regular common order or succession of events.



noun
Ordinary  n.  (pl. ordinaries)  
1.
(Law)
(a)
(Roman Law) An officer who has original jurisdiction in his own right, and not by deputation.
(b)
(Eng. Law) One who has immediate jurisdiction in matters ecclesiastical; an ecclesiastical judge; also, a deputy of the bishop, or a clergyman appointed to perform divine service for condemned criminals and assist in preparing them for death.
(c)
(Am. Law) A judicial officer, having generally the powers of a judge of probate or a surrogate.
2.
The mass; the common run. (Obs.) "I see no more in you than in the ordinary Of nature's salework."
3.
That which is so common, or continued, as to be considered a settled establishment or institution. (R.) "Spain had no other wars save those which were grown into an ordinary."
4.
Anything which is in ordinary or common use. "Water buckets, wagons, cart wheels, plow socks, and other ordinaries."
5.
A dining room or eating house where a meal is prepared for all comers, at a fixed price for the meal, in distinction from one where each dish is separately charged; a table d'hôte; hence, also, the meal furnished at such a dining room. "All the odd words they have picked up in a coffeehouse, or a gaming ordinary, are produced as flowers of style." "He exacted a tribute for licenses to hawkers and peddlers and to ordinaries."
6.
(Her.) A charge or bearing of simple form, one of nine or ten which are in constant use. The bend, chevron, chief, cross, fesse, pale, and saltire are uniformly admitted as ordinaries. Some authorities include bar, bend sinister, pile, and others. See Subordinary.
In ordinary.
(a)
In actual and constant service; statedly attending and serving; as, a physician or chaplain in ordinary. An ambassador in ordinary is one constantly resident at a foreign court.
(b)
(Naut.) Out of commission and laid up; said of a naval vessel.
Ordinary of the Mass (R. C. Ch.), the part of the Mass which is the same every day; called also the canon of the Mass.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Ordinary" Quotes from Famous Books



... discord and anarchy at home. So far as his acts, or those of his agents, have threatened an immediate commitment in the war, or flagrant insult to the authority of the laws, their effect has been counteracted by the ordinary cognizance of the laws, and by an exertion of the powers confided to me. Where their danger was not imminent, they have been borne with, from sentiments of regard to his nation, from a sense of their friendship towards us, from ...
— The Life of George Washington, Vol. 5 (of 5) • John Marshall

... "I don't know," he confessed. "The evidence is the sort that any court in the world would accept, if it concerned ordinary, normal events. Especially the cases investigated by the Society for Psychical Research: they have been verified. But how can anybody know of something that hasn't happened yet? If it hasn't happened yet, it doesn't exist, and you can't have real ...
— Time and Time Again • Henry Beam Piper

... The ordinary person will probably not believe this, because he conceives of good use of language as an accomplishment to be learned from books, a prim system of genteel manners to be put on when occasion demands, a sort of superficial education ...
— The Art Of Writing & Speaking The English Language - Word-Study and Composition & Rhetoric • Sherwin Cody

... found the Bible already open on the table for their evening devotions. I will close this chapter, as I began the first, with something like his prayer. David's prayers were characteristic of the whole man; but they also partook, in far more than ordinary, of the mood of the moment. His last occupation ...
— David Elginbrod • George MacDonald

... composed by any writer of his period. In his boyhood Somers was a poet; in his maturer years the friend of poets. The friend of Prior and Gay, Arbuthnot and Pope, Lord Chancellor Harcourt, wrote verses of more than ordinary merit, and alike in periods of official triumph and in times of retirement valued the friendship of men of wit above the many successes of his public career. Lord Chancellor King, author of 'Constitution and Discipline of the Primitive Church,' was John Locke's dutiful ...
— A Book About Lawyers • John Cordy Jeaffreson


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