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nonextraordinary

Nonextraordinary is an English adjective used to describe something that is not extraordinary; it does not stand out as remarkable, exceptional, or surprising. In ordinary usage, it is often replaced by synonyms such as ordinary, usual, or routine, but nonextraordinary signals explicitly that extraordinariness is absent rather than merely labeling something as commonplace. The tone is typically neutral or clinical, and the term may appear in evaluative writing when a distinction between exceptional and non-exceptional features matters.

Origin and usage: The word is a compound formed with the prefix non- attached to the adjective

Examples and context: For instance, a nonextraordinary result is one that falls within expected parameters and

extraordinary.
Extraordinary
itself
derives
from
Latin
extraordinarius
(outside
ordinary),
via
French
and
English.
Because
many
readers
expect
simpler
language,
nonextraordinary
remains
relatively
rare
and
can
sound
contrived
outside
formal
registers.
When
clarity
or
conciseness
is
preferred,
writers
usually
choose
ordinary
or
typical
instead
of
using
nonextraordinary.
lacks
notable
novelty.
The
term
is
more
likely
to
appear
in
analytical
reports,
academic
writing,
or
procedural
documents
than
in
everyday
conversation.
Related
terms
include
ordinary,
normal,
commonplace,
and
mundane.