common

common — noun

  • commonsingular
  • commonsplural

1. a grassy piece of land, typically found close to a town or village, that anyone

1.名詞B1
釋義

a grassy piece of land, typically found close to a town or village, that anyone in the public may use freely.

例句

Villagers have grazed their sheep on the common for centuries.

collocation: on the common

The children ran across the common to reach the playground on the far side.

concrete scene: children playing

同義詞
  • green

    a smaller grassy area, often at the centre of a village

  • park

    a public green space, usually managed by a town council

用法筆記

Often capitalized in place names, e.g. Clapham Common. Frequently preceded by 'the'.

2. a quality, interest, or experience that is shared by two or more people or thing

2.名詞B1
釋義

a quality, interest, or experience that is shared by two or more people or things, used especially in the phrase 'have something in common' to say that people are alike in a particular way.

例句

Shirin and Antonia learned they had much in common during their first week at university.

pattern: have much in common

The two languages have very little in common despite being spoken in neighbouring countries.

pattern: have very little in common

文法句型

have something in common

have a lot / nothing / little in common

用法筆記

Frequently used with quantifiers: a lot, nothing, little, much, one thing. The preposition 'with' introduces the person or group being compared.

3. used to introduce a similarity or shared quality between someone or something an

3.名詞C1
釋義

used to introduce a similarity or shared quality between someone or something and another person or thing; meaning the same way or position as.

例句

In common with many small shops, the bakery struggled to compete with large supermarket chains.

pattern: in common with many + noun

Reuben, in common with most of his classmates, found the final exam surprisingly difficult.

同義詞
  • like

    simpler and more common in everyday speech

  • similarly to

    more formal, used in academic or professional writing

文法句型

in common with + noun phrase

用法筆記

This phrase always introduces a similarity that the subject shares with another group or person. It typically appears at the beginning of a sentence or directly after the subject. Distinguish from sense 2: 'in common with' compares two entities, while 'have something in common' states that a shared quality exists.

common — adjective