English to Spanish Dictionary commonplace

commonplace

vulgar
definition
noun
bombing has become almost a commonplace of public life there
a usual or ordinary thing.
a notable quotation copied into a commonplace book.
adjective
unemployment was commonplace in his profession
not unusual; ordinary.
translation of 'commonplace'
verb
ser vulgar
noun
banalidad
adjective
trivial,
vulgar
example
The argument is in fact a 'commonplace' of political science.
It had been fed to us for a long time, and therefore, we looked at it as a tedious and 'commonplace' state of things.
Whatever you are looking for we have it in the collection, from the endangered to the 'commonplace' .
He advocated that literature should record the writer's affectionate response to ordinary phenomena and 'commonplace' happenings.
A vandalised car, all but ignored by passers-by, reflects how 'commonplace' minor crime has become in small towns.
So instead politicians almost uniformly retreat to the safety of the platitude and 'commonplace' .
In Rome, assassination would have been a relatively 'commonplace' event; especially for people of the higher class.
Using a computer is becoming more 'commonplace' and sometimes is an absolute necessity for your child to complete his homework assignments.
The 'commonplace' pessimistic argument points out that since low interest rates have been good for the economy, higher interest rates will be bad.
It's also one that mentions God as a source of inspiration: something that is rarely mentioned so plainly elsewhere but is a 'commonplace' in country songs.
With all these 'commonplace' conventions, what is it that makes the file outstanding?
This is perfectly possible for even an ordinary club level sailor - it is quite 'commonplace' not to have to qualify for an event.
If you think buffets are 'commonplace' and boring, just try the beverage buffet.
He is never dull and even his more 'commonplace' chapters are enlivened with fascinating detail or asides.
It is a 'commonplace' in the West that governments should be as democratic as possible.
Now 60 years on, the process has been repeated, but reversed, as the 'commonplace' colour of modern films returns to nostalgic black and white.
The loss of a job - a sadly 'commonplace' event in today's turbulent economic climate - is not just a blow to the wallet, but a severe hit to the psyche.
It used to be a 'commonplace' that activities aimed at uncovering truth and knowledge set about the relatively simple tasks of making observations and recording results.
The novelty of the new popular poetry is not its mass appeal; that was a 'commonplace' in American culture in the late nineteenth century.
He insists that what he is doing is to configure the 'commonplace' issues of ordinary life.
None of the others had noticed the little scene; it was an event too 'commonplace' to mark.
It has become a 'commonplace' for playwrights to require actors to play several different parts, and at times a mere two actors is all that is needed to portray several dozen characters.
It is also, we must never forget, made from joy and the celebration of simple and ordinary and 'commonplace' things and events.
Sontag acknowledges that she is stating a 'commonplace' when she notes the ‘erotic lure [of] things that are vile and repulsive’.
The most 'commonplace' events are also opportunities, life-determining choices made or not made.
Human rights violations are not some sort of other worldly event, they are sometimes very 'commonplace' .
A 'commonplace' event, one would assume on a hot day.
He soon discovered that death was a 'commonplace' event.
The point is only driven home by seeing something that has become a 'commonplace' represented as something surprising.
Then he makes a characteristic move: you see how he is able to invest the ordinary, the 'commonplace' , with mystery.
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