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Unusual

Unusual is an adjective used to describe something that is not typical or expected in a given context. It signals deviation from the ordinary, norms, or customary patterns, and it is inherently relative to the situation. An unusual event may attract attention because it contrasts with what usually happens, but it does not carry a claim of impossibility. As a modifier, unusual can apply to objects, behavior, occurrences, or results, and it often appears in phrases such as unusually late, unusually high, or an unusual decision.

Origin and usage: The word unusual is formed with the prefix un- attached to usual, which derives

Antonyms and relation: Antonyms include usual, ordinary, and common. Related terms include rare, atypical, extraordinary, and

from
late
Latin
usualis
via
Old
French
usuel.
The
term
dates
to
early
modern
English
and
has
become
common
in
everyday
speech
and
formal
writing.
The
adverb
form
is
unusually,
used
to
describe
the
degree
to
which
something
deviates
from
the
norm.
In
scientific
or
journalistic
contexts,
unusual
is
sometimes
used
to
denote
statistical
or
conceptual
rarity,
but
it
typically
remains
a
qualitative
judgment
rather
than
a
precise
measure.
exceptional,
though
these
carry
slightly
different
connotations.
The
word
often
occurs
in
expressions
like
"unusual
for
her
age"
or
"an
unusually
stubborn
problem,"
where
the
emphasis
is
on
deviation
rather
than
value
judgment.