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Толковый словарь английского языка Oxford English Reference - ordinary

 

Ordinary

ordinary
adj. & n. --adj. 1 a regular, normal, customary, usual (in the ordinary course of events). b boring; commonplace (an ordinary little man). 2 Brit. Law (esp. of a judge) having immediate or ex officio jurisdiction, not deputed. --n. (pl. -ies) 1 Brit. Law a person, esp. a judge, having immediate or ex officio jurisdiction. 2 (the Ordinary) a an archbishop in a province. b a bishop in a diocese. 3 (usu. Ordinary) RC Ch. a those parts of a service, esp. the mass, which do not vary from day to day. b a rule or book laying down the order of divine service. 4 Heraldry a charge of the earliest, simplest, and commonest kind (esp. chief, pale, bend, fess, bar, chevron, cross, saltire). 5 (Ordinary) (also Lord Ordinary) any of the judges of the Court of Session in Scotland, constituting the Outer House. 6 esp. US hist. an early type of bicycle with one large and one very small wheel; a penny-farthing. 7 Brit. hist. a a public meal provided at a fixed time and price at an inn etc. b an establishment providing this. 8 US a tavern. Phrases and idioms in ordinary Brit. by permanent appointment (esp. to the royal household) (physician in ordinary). in the ordinary way if the circumstances are or were not exceptional. ordinary level Brit. hist. the lowest of the three levels of the GCE examination. ordinary scale = decimal scale. ordinary seaman a sailor of the lowest rank, that below able-bodied seaman. ordinary shares Brit. shares entitling holders to a dividend from net profits (cf. preference shares). out of the ordinary unusual. Derivatives ordinarily adv. ordinariness n. Etymology: ME f. L ordinarius orderly (as ORDER)
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1.
  I. noun (plural -naries) Etymology: Middle English ordinarie, from Anglo-French & Medieval Latin; Anglo-French, from Medieval Latin ordinarius, from Latin ordinarius, adjective Date: 14th century 1. a. a prelate exercising original jurisdiction over a specified territory or group, a clergyman appointed formerly in England to attend condemned criminals, a judge of probate in some states of the United States, the parts of the Mass that do not vary from day to day, the regular or customary condition or course of things, 4. a meal served to all comers at a fixed price, a tavern or eating house serving regular meals, a common heraldic charge (as the bend) of simple form, II. adjective Etymology: Middle English ordinarie, from Latin ordinarius, from ordin-, ordo order Date: 15th century of a kind to be expected in the normal order of events ; routine, usual , having or constituting immediate or original jurisdiction, 3. of common quality, rank, or ability , deficient in quality ; poor, inferior , see: common ordinarily adverb ordinariness noun ...
Толковый словарь английского языка

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