To participate in common; enjoy or suffer in common.
To confer; discourse together; commune; speak.
To have a joint right with others in common ground.
To live together or in common; eat at a table in common. Also commonize.
To communicate.
Of or pertaining to all—that is, to all the human race, or to all in a given country, region, or locality; being a general possession or right: of a public nature or character.
Pertaining equally to, or proceeding equally from, two or more; joint: as, life and sense are common to man and beast; it was done by common consent of the parties.
Of frequent or usual occurrence; not exceptional; usual; habitual.
Not distinguished from the majority of others; of persons, belonging to the general mass; not notable for rank, ability, etc.; of things, not of superior excellence; ordinary: as, a common soldier; the common people; common food or clothing.
Of the common people.
Trite; hackneyed; commonplace; low; inferior; vulgar; coarse.
At the disposal of all; prostitute.
Not sacred or sanctified; ceremonially unclean.
In grammar: Both masculine and feminine; optionally masculine or feminine: said of a word, in a language generally distinguishing masculine and feminine, which is capable of use as either.
Used indifferently to designate any individual of a class; appellative; not proper: as, a common noun: opposed to proper (which see).
In prosody, either long or short; of doubtful or variable quantity: as, a common vowel; a common syllable.
In anatomy: Not peculiar or particular; not specialized or differentiated: as, the common integument of the body.
Forming or formed by other more particular parts: as, the common carotid or common iliac artery, as distinguished from the internal and external arteries of the same name; the common trunk of a nerve, as distinguished from its branches; the common origin of the coracobrachialis muscle and of the short head of the biceps muscle—that is, the origin which they have in common.
In entomology, continuous on two united surfaces: said of lines and marks which pass in an uninterrupted manner from the anterior to the posterior wings when both are extended, or of
marks or processes on the two elytra which when closed appear as one.
In those parts of the southern United States which were formerly a province of France, small tracts of land, usually from one to three yards in width by forty in length and fenced in, which were cultivated by the inhabitants of villages.
More appropriately, the parts of the former system which do not rest for their authority on any subsisting express legislative act; the unwritten law. In this sense common law consists in those principles and rules which are gathered from the reports of adjudged cases, from the opinions of text-writers and commentators, and from popular usage and custom, in contradistinction to statute law.
More narrowly, that part of the system just defined which was recognized and administered by the king's justices, in contradistinction to the modifications introduced by the chancellors as rules of equity in restraint or enlargement of the customary and statutory law (see equity), and, in respect of procedure, in contradistinction to the code practice.