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run-of-the-mill

Run-of-the-mill vs Average - What's the difference?

run-of-the-mill | average | Related terms |

Run-of-the-mill is a related term of average.


As adjectives the difference between run-of-the-mill and average

is that run-of-the-mill is (idiomatic) ordinary; not special while average is (not comparable) constituting or relating to the average.

As a noun average is

(legal|marine) financial loss due to damage to transported goods; compensation for damage or loss.

As a verb average is

(informal) to compute the arithmetic mean of.

Run-of-the-mill vs Garden-variety - What's the difference?

run-of-the-mill | garden-variety | Related terms |

Run-of-the-mill is a related term of garden-variety.


As adjectives the difference between run-of-the-mill and garden-variety

is that run-of-the-mill is (idiomatic) ordinary; not special while garden-variety is .

Normal vs Run-of-the-mill - What's the difference?

Normal | run-of-the-mill | Synonyms |

Normal is a synonym of run-of-the-mill.


As a noun Normal

is standard.

As an adjective run-of-the-mill is

(idiomatic) ordinary; not special.

Run-of-the-mill vs Balanced - What's the difference?

run-of-the-mill | balanced | Related terms |

Run-of-the-mill is a related term of balanced.


As adjectives the difference between run-of-the-mill and balanced

is that run-of-the-mill is (idiomatic) ordinary; not special while balanced is containing elements in appropriate proportion.

As a verb balanced is

(balance).

Commonplace vs Run-of-the-mill - What's the difference?

commonplace | run-of-the-mill | Related terms |

Commonplace is a related term of run-of-the-mill.


As adjectives the difference between commonplace and run-of-the-mill

is that commonplace is ordinary; having no remarkable characteristics while run-of-the-mill is (idiomatic) ordinary; not special.

As a noun commonplace

is a platitude or.

As a verb commonplace

is to make a commonplace book.

Run-of-the-mill vs Time-honored - What's the difference?

run-of-the-mill | time-honored | Related terms |

Run-of-the-mill is a related term of time-honored.


As adjectives the difference between run-of-the-mill and time-honored

is that run-of-the-mill is (idiomatic) ordinary; not special while time-honored is honored because of great age, or long usage.

Traditional vs Run-of-the-mill - What's the difference?

traditional | run-of-the-mill | Related terms |

Traditional is a related term of run-of-the-mill.


As adjectives the difference between traditional and run-of-the-mill

is that traditional is of or pertaining to tradition; derived from tradition; communicated from ancestors to descendants by word only; transmitted from age to age without writing; as, traditional opinions; traditional customs; traditional expositions of the scriptures while run-of-the-mill is (idiomatic) ordinary; not special.

Run-of-the-mill vs Regular - What's the difference?

run-of-the-mill | regular | Related terms |

Run-of-the-mill is a related term of regular.


As adjectives the difference between run-of-the-mill and regular

is that run-of-the-mill is (idiomatic) ordinary; not special while regular is .

As an adverb regular is

regularly.

Classic vs Run-of-the-mill - What's the difference?

classic | run-of-the-mill | Related terms |

Classic is a related term of run-of-the-mill.


As adjectives the difference between classic and run-of-the-mill

is that classic is of or relating to the first class or rank, especially in literature or art while run-of-the-mill is (idiomatic) ordinary; not special.

As a noun classic

is a perfect and/or early example of a particular style.

Daily vs Run-of-the-mill - What's the difference?

daily | run-of-the-mill | Related terms |

Daily is a related term of run-of-the-mill.


As adjectives the difference between daily and run-of-the-mill

is that daily is quotidian, that occurs every day, or at least every working day while run-of-the-mill is (idiomatic) ordinary; not special.

As an adverb daily

is quotidianly, every day.

As a noun daily

is a newspaper that is published every day.

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