ORDINARY vs AVERAGE: NOUN
- 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.
- 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.
- Anything which is in ordinary or common use.
- That which is so common, or continued, as to be considered a settled establishment or institution.
- The mass; the common run.
- A judicial officer, having generally the powers of a judge of probate or a surrogate.
- An officer who has original jurisdiction in his own right, and not by deputation.
- In the stock-market, a share of ordinary or common (that is, not preferred) stock.
- The bicycle with a large front and a small rear wheel, which preceded the ‘safety’ bicycle: so called because it was the common form of bicycle before 1890. See bicycle.
- Abbreviated ord.
- See def. 10 .
- The state of a ship not in actual service, but laid up under the charge of officers: as, a ship in ordinary (one laid up under the direction of the officers of a navy-yard or dockyard).
- In the navy: The establishment of persons formerly employed by government to take charge of ships of war laid up in harbors.
- In heraldry, a very common bearing, usually bounded by straight lines, but sometimes by one of the heraldic lines, wavy, nebulé, or the like. See line, 12.
- The average; the mass; the common run.
- A place where such meals are served; an eating-house where there is a fixed price for a meal.
- A usual or customary meal; hence, a regular meal provided at, an eating-house for every one, as distinguished from dishes specially ordered; a table d'hôte.
- Something regular and customary; something in common use.
- Rule; guide.
- The established or due sequence; the appointed or fixed form; in the Roman Catholic missal and in other Latin liturgies, the established sequence or order for saying mass; the service of the mass (with exclusion of the canon) as preëminent; the ordo.
- A judge empowered to take cognizance of causes in his own right, and not by delegation.
- An English diocesan officer, entitled the ordinary of assize and sessions, appointed to give criminals their neck-verses, perform other religious services for them, and assist in preparing them for death.
- One possessing immediate jurisdiction in his own right and not by special deputation.
- A tavern or inn providing such a meal.
- A complete meal provided at a fixed price.
- One of the simplest and commonest charges, such as the bend and the cross.
- A cleric, such as the residential bishop of a diocese, with ordinary jurisdiction over a specified territory.
- A division of the Roman Breviary containing the unchangeable parts of the office other than the Psalms.
- The parts of the Mass that remain unchanged from day to day.
- A judge with direct authority as opposed to delegated authority to decide a case.
- The usual or normal condition or course of events.
- The expected or commonplace condition or situation
- A clergyman appointed to prepare condemned prisoners for death
- A judge of a probate court
- An early bicycle with a very large front wheel and small back wheel
- (heraldry) any of several conventional figures used on shields
- In the English corn trade, the medial price of the several kinds of grain in the principal corn markets.
- Any medial estimate or general statement derived from a comparison of diverse specific cases; a medium or usual size, quantity, quality, rate, etc.
- A mean proportion, medial sum or quantity, made out of unequal sums or quantities; an arithmetical mean.
- Are sundry small charges, which occur regularly, and are necessarily defrayed by the master in the usual course of a voyage; such as port charges, common pilotage, and the like, which formerly were, and in some cases still are, borne partly by the ship and partly by the cargo. In the clause commonly found in bills of lading, “primage and average accustomed,” average means a kind of composition established by usage for such charges, which were formerly assessed by way of average.
- Signifies the damage or partial loss happening to the ship, or cargo, or freight, in consequence of some fortuitous or unavoidable accident; and it is borne by the individual owners of the articles damaged, or by their insurers.
- A contribution made, by all parties concerned in a sea adventure, toward a loss occasioned by the voluntary sacrifice of the property of some of the parties in interest for the benefit of all. It is called general average, because it falls upon the gross amount of ship, cargo, and freight at risk and saved by the sacrifice.
- The equitable and proportionate distribution of loss or expense among all interested.
- A contribution to a loss or charge which has been imposed upon one of several for the general benefit; damage done by sea perils.
- Any charge in addition to the regular charge for freight of goods shipped.
- A tariff or duty on goods, etc.
- That service which a tenant owed his lord, to be done by the work beasts of the tenant, as the carriage of wheat, turf, etc.
- The stubble and grass left in corn-fields after harvest.
- The aggregate number of runs scored from a bowler, divided by the number of batsmen he has ‘dismissed.’
- In cricket: The aggregate number of runs a batsman has scored, divided by the number of his completed innings.
- A mode of estimating, by comparison, the strength or weakness of a billiard play.
- Any medial amount, estimate, or general statement based on a comparison of a number of diverse specific cases; a medium.
- A sum or quantity intermediate to a number of different sums or quantities, obtained by adding them together and dividing the result by the number of quantities added; an arithmetical mean proportion. Thus, if four persons lose respectively $10, $20, $30, and $40, the average loss by the four is $25.
- A contribution made by the owners of a ship's freight and cargo, in proportion to their several interests, to make good a loss that has been sustained or an expense incurred for the general safety of the ship and cargo.
- A loss, or the sum paid on account of a loss (such as that of an anchor), when the general safety is not in question, and which falls on the owner of the particular property lost: called more specifically particular average.
- A small charge paid by the master on account of the ship and cargo, such as pilotage, towage, etc.: called more specifically petty average.
- A small charge payable by the shippers of goods to the master of the ship, over and above the freight, for his care of the goods. Hence the clause, in bills of lading, “paying so much freight, with primage and average accustomed.”
- A duty or tax upon goods.
- In old law, a kind of service owed by tenants to their superior.
- Small expenses or charges that are usually paid by the master of a ship.
- A charge incurred through such a loss.
- The equitable distribution of such a loss among concerned parties.
- The incurrence of damage or loss of a ship or cargo at sea.
- The loss of a ship or cargo, caused by damage at sea.
- The ratio of a team's or player's successful performances such as wins, hits, or goals, divided by total opportunities for successful performance, such as games, times at bat, or shots.
- The usual or ordinary kind or quality.
- An intermediate level or degree.
- A number that typifies a set of numbers of which it is a function.
- A statistic describing the location of a distribution
ORDINARY vs AVERAGE: ADJECTIVE
- One not expert or fully skilled, and hence ranking below an able seaman.
- Of common rank, quality, or ability; not distinguished by superior excellence or beauty; hence, not distinguished in any way; commonplace; inferior; of little merit
- Common; customary; usual.
- According to established order; methodical; settled; regular.
- Designating a differential equation containing no more than one independent variable.
- Having direct authority to decide a case, rather than being delegated that power, as a judge.
- Not particularly good; not better than average.
- Of no exceptional ability, degree, or quality; average.
- Commonly encountered; usual: : common.
- Lacking special distinction, rank, or status; commonly encountered
- Not exceptional in any way especially in quality or ability or size or degree
- Assessed in accordance with the law of averages.
- Usual or ordinary in kind or character.
- Being intermediate between extremes, as on a scale.
- Of, relating to, or constituting an average.
- Relating to or constituting the most frequent value in a distribution
- Relating to or constituting the middle value of an ordered set of values (or the average of the middle two in an even-numbered set)
- Lacking special distinction, rank, or status; commonly encountered
- Of no exceptional quality or ability
- Approximating the statistical norm or average or expected value
- Around the middle of a scale of evaluation of physical measures
ORDINARY vs AVERAGE: VERB
- N/A
- Compute the average of
- Amount to or come to an average, without loss or gain
- Achieve or reach on average
ORDINARY vs AVERAGE: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- N/A
- To be or amount to an average.
- To distribute proportionately.
- To do or have an average of.
- To calculate the average of.
ORDINARY vs AVERAGE: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Commonly encountered
- Vulgar, etc. (see common), homely.
- Ugly; not handsome: as, she is an ordinary woman.
- Common in occurrence; such as may be met with at any time or place; not distinguished in any way from others; hence, often, somewhat inferior; of little merit; not distinguished by superior excellence; commonplace; mean; low.
- Common in practice or use; usual; frequent; habitual.
- Conformed to a fixed or regulated sequence or arrangement; hence, sanctioned by law or usage; established; settled; stated; regular; normal; customary.
- Commonly encountered
- Lacking exceptional quality or ability
- An intermediate scale value regarded as normal or usual
- (sports) the ratio of successful performances to opportunities
- To divide among a number proportionally; divide the total amount of by the number of equal shares: as, to average a loss.
- To result in, as an arithmetical mean term; amount to, as a mean sum or quantity: as, wheat averages 56 pounds to the bushel.
- To find the arithemetical mean of, as unequal sums or quantities; reduce to a mean.
ORDINARY vs AVERAGE: RELATED WORDS
- Characterless, Commonplace, Routine, Average, Simple, Indifferent, Unexceptional, Banal, Trivial, Unremarkable, Workaday, Quotidian, Mundane, Common, Everyday
- Percentage, Average out, Modal, Medium, Fair, Common, Moderate, Mean, Intermediate, Ordinary, Mediocre, Norm, Middling, Normal, Median
ORDINARY vs AVERAGE: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Characterless, Commonplace, Routine, Average, Simple, Indifferent, Unexceptional, Banal, Trivial, Unremarkable, Workaday, Quotidian, Mundane, Common, Everyday
- Avg, Percentage, Modal, Medium, Fair, Common, Moderate, Mean, Intermediate, Ordinary, Mediocre, Norm, Middling, Normal, Median
ORDINARY vs AVERAGE: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- After all, Pizarro started out as a rather ordinary person, and Trujillo here is a rather ordinary town.
- An ordinary citizen with an ordinary job is not likely to be associated in death with occupation.
- Louisa Clark is an ordinary girl living an exceedingly ordinary life who has barely been farther afield than their tiny village.
- The MATLAB ODE solvers are designed to handle ordinary differential equations or permission of instructor order ordinary diufb00erential equations Shen!
- In addition, Congress specifically exempted ordinary books and ordinary printed materials from third party testing for compliance with the total lead content requirement.
- Ordinary Shares and Class X Ordinary Shares in issue immediately prior to such split, subdivision, combination or reclassification.
- Mary was an ordinary girl, who likely planned to live an ordinary life.
- He stirs uneasily, braces himself, renews his vow to skip town, and so once again the ordinary becomes merely ordinary.
- Ordinary civil and criminal wrongs can be addressed through ordinary judicial processes.
- Ordinary leakage, ordinary loss in weight or volume or ordinary wear and tear.
- In this article, we shall study to solve problems to calculate displacement, Average Speed, and average Velocity.
- The next fastest month was October, selling on average four days faster than the annual average.
- If not all problem instances have equal probability of occurring, then average case must be calculated using a weighted average.
- At Riide, the average fare and average driver earnings have dropped since Uber launched in February, Triolo said.
- Companies examine and format it is there was weighted average function average percent across entire google to answer?
- The average check indicates what each customeron average is expected to spend.
- Now, the base is average consolidated total assets minus average tangible equity.
- Acorn crops in many areas were only average to below average.
- Average job is above the average in Ohio.
- Calculate their number average and mass average molecular masses.
ORDINARY vs AVERAGE: QUESTIONS
- Are celebrities more newsworthy than ordinary people?
- How are superconductors different from ordinary conductors?
- What constitutes showing ordinary care and Prudence?
- How are supercapacitors different from ordinary capacitors?
- Are bonuses taxed differently than ordinary income?
- Are entrepreneurs more overconfident than ordinary managers?
- Would ordinary people have understood the prashastis?
- What are the ordinary functions in qabstractitemmodel?
- How do ordinary people make choices everyday to remain ordinary?
- Can functionalism imply that ordinary human persons are ordinary?
- Is average pitching velocity really that important?
- What is the average successful crowdfunding campaign?
- Are schizophrenics generally below average intelligence?
- What is the average water usage of the average household?
- What is the average average balance of SBI's regular savings account?
- Should I use the average or average of my technical replicates?
- What is the average Scrabble player's average per turn?
- What is the average average salary of a medical assistant?
- What happens when average cost equals average revenue?
- Do geniuses have an average or above-average intelligence?