ORDINARY vs TRIVIAL: NOUN
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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
- Anything which is in ordinary or common use.
- 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.
- That which is so common, or continued, as to be considered a settled establishment or institution.
- 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 judicial officer, having generally the powers of a judge of probate or a surrogate.
- The mass; the common run.
- 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.
- One of the three liberal arts which constitute the trivium.
- A coefficient or other quantity not containing the quantities of the set considered.
- One of the three liberal arts forming the trivium.
ORDINARY vs TRIVIAL: ADJECTIVE
- One not expert or fully skilled, and hence ranking below an able seaman.
- Not exceptional in any way especially in quality or ability or size or degree
- 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
- 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.
- Of little substance or significance
- (informal terms) small and of little importance
- Concerned with trivialities
- Not large enough to consider or notice
- (informal) small and of little importance
- Indistinguishable in case of truth or falsity.
- Pertaining to the trivium.
- Self-evident.
- Relating to or designating the name of a species; specific as opposed to generic.
- Concerned with or involving trivia.
- Common, ordinary.
- The specific name.
- Of or pertaining to the trivium.
- Of little worth or importance; inconsiderable; trifling; petty; paltry.
- Ordinary; commonplace; trifling; vulgar.
- Found anywhere; common.
- Obvious and dull
- Of little significance or value.
- Concerned with or involving unimportant matters; superficial.
- Of, relating to, or being the solution of an equation in which every variable is equal to zero.
- Of, relating to, or being the simplest possible case; self-evident.
ORDINARY vs TRIVIAL: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Commonly encountered
- Conformed to a fixed or regulated sequence or arrangement; hence, sanctioned by law or usage; established; settled; stated; regular; normal; customary.
- Common in practice or use; usual; frequent; habitual.
- 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.
- Ugly; not handsome: as, she is an ordinary woman.
- Vulgar, etc. (see common), homely.
- Such as may be found everywhere; commonplace; ordinary; vulgar.
- Trifling; insignificant; of little worth or importance; paltry.
- Occupying one's self with trifles; trifling.
- Of or pertaining to the trivium, or the first three liberal arts—grammar, rhetoric, and logic; hence, initiatory; rudimentary.
- In zoology and botany: Common; popular; vernacular; not technical: noting the popular or familiar names of animals or plants, as distinguished from the technical New Latin names.
- Specific; not generic: noting what used to be called the nomen triviale—that is, the second or specific term in the binomial technical name of an animal or a plant, such terms being often adopted or adapted from a popular name or epithet.
- In echinoderms, specifically, of or pertaining to the trivium: as, the trivial (anterior) ambulacra of a sea-urchin.
ORDINARY vs TRIVIAL: RELATED WORDS
- Characterless, Commonplace, Routine, Average, Simple, Indifferent, Unexceptional, Banal, Trivial, Unremarkable, Workaday, Quotidian, Mundane, Common, Everyday
- Fiddling, Niggling, Ordinary, Inconsiderable, Commonplace, Piffling, Superficial, Piddling, Frivolous, Petty, Footling, Picayune, Banal, Insignificant, Unimportant
ORDINARY vs TRIVIAL: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Characterless, Commonplace, Routine, Average, Simple, Indifferent, Unexceptional, Banal, Trivial, Unremarkable, Workaday, Quotidian, Mundane, Common, Everyday
- Fiddling, Niggling, Ordinary, Inconsiderable, Commonplace, Piffling, Superficial, Piddling, Frivolous, Petty, Footling, Picayune, Banal, Insignificant, Unimportant
ORDINARY vs TRIVIAL: 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.
- Just how trivial is that piece of me?
- Way to bully publishers over something so trivial.
- Indeed, I am quickly assigned several trivial tasks.
- CPUs and my problem was trivial to parallelize.
- It is the snobbishness of the young to suppose that a theorem is trivial because the proof is trivial.
- Many many many years later, I still often make the mistake of assuming things that look trivial to me are also trivial to others.
- What we found also is that they had a shortfall, and it seems trivial but it is not trivial, of personnel specialists.
- While deploying Azure AD Directory Synchronization is generally a trivial exercise, establishing and maintaining a highly available ADFS infrastructure is not trivial.
- What trivial, trivial stuff, interesting to hardly a soul under heaven, save only about three!
- It is very trivial stuff, and when not trivial usually false.
ORDINARY vs TRIVIAL: 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?
- What was the first computer version of Trivial Pursuit?
- What pension rights are included in trivial commutation?
- What are the different editions of Trivial Pursuit?
- How should one respond to trivial, obvious questions?
- Which country published the classic Trivial Pursuit game?
- Was ist der Unterschied zwischen Trivial und symbiotisch?
- Do Transworld identities require non-trivial essences?
- Is the Hamiltonian a topologically trivial insulator?
- What about trivial benefits for staff entertaining?
- How do you find the trivial and non-trivial solutions of linear equations?