WordCount presents the 86,800 most frequently used English words, ranked in order of commonness. |
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She'd had this disagreement many times with Andy, and he'd always trumped her with what he called her pretensions to commonness. |
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The commonness of shrub thickets on abandoned fields thus may reflect their nearly ubiquitous seed sources and good establishment ability. |
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The ambitions, the hopes, the dreams, every twisted, bizarre, seemingly abnormal thought I ever had melts in the glare of commonness. |
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We agreed to link several global initiatives of commonness by linkages to each other's web sites. |
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For less serious mental disorders, initiatives that emphasize the commonness of mental health problems appear to be helpful. |
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The objects of the everyday life go out of the commonness to ally the useful for the pleasure. |
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The definition of a new commonness requires a reconsideration of the issue of public space on a European scale. |
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Outside Italy there was great variation in both commonness and size of crypts. |
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Schuch's acting possessed a quality of commonness untainted by triviality or grossness. |
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It is such commonness and balance that will establish a teacher as approachable to all. |
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However, whether specialized or generic there is commonness across the general approach of social networking sites. |
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Here no trouble but a story, that of the violent commonness of the everyday life. |
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And the city architects were willing to escape from the monotony and grey commonness of residential districts being developed. |
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The Holy Spirit unites and liberates to more openness, understanding, and commonness. |
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Nowadays, the exclusion and the precariousness in the city by th housing became a commonplace, a commonness. |
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Despite the importance of domestic work to the functioning of economies and society, its sheer commonness and ordinariness conspire to maintain its continued invisibility. |
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Yet while showing her in all commonness, she had to be portrayed in a way that audiences would realize that beneath the surface her instincts were fine, heartwarming, and noble. |
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This mix of diversity and commonness allows us to pool on a case by case basis the resources needed to satisfy the individual needs of our clients. |
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The commonness of HIV is certainly one them. |
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He noted the commonness of kites in English cities where they snatched food out of the hands of children. |
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In one, he had highlighted a passage about the relative commonness of T. bataar, which, he believed, underscored his point that his specimens were scientifically unimportant. |
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Today, Turkish forms of the state control of religion turn out to be a model of reference. Or do we have any other way of thinking about democracy as a way of inventing new forms of commonness? |
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Tourism and culture are important because they are eminently humanistic and peaceful in their search for European individuality within a European commonness. |
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