Exact(1)
Churchill is writing about suppressed female anguish, and Mrs. Jarrett's in-one recitations, terrifying as they are, can perhaps be interpreted as not that much worse than what commonplace women contend with every day.
Similar(59)
Sometimes he seems to seek risk, as if bored by what is commonplace, predictable and safe.
At the Fort Hood hotel, what is commonplace in the civilian world is new and innovative.
They teach us to upgrade, to refine, to jettison what is commonplace for something a bit more scarce.
In many ways it emphasizes tradition so that the departures from what is commonplace are all the more marked.
It felt like a rebalancing of what was commonplace at women's shows, but it also felt prescient as to what was to come.
Miliband spoke only what is commonplace among most people, centre-ground stuff – but rare from politicians nervous about the might of vested interests and donors.
But this isn't the model for charities; indeed it's the opposite – instead they celebrate what is commonplace for most of them.
Like other things that make New Orleans so utterly singular, what's commonplace within that one city should never be taken for granted.
John McGahern, in contrast to Joyce's late work, achieved an unmatched mastery of simplicity in language and with a compassionate and unwavering gaze wrote bravely of what was commonplace but could not be spoken of.
Again, that's very unlike what is commonplace in Silicon Valley.
Write better and faster with AI suggestions while staying true to your unique style.
Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com