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commonalities

/kom-uh-nal-i-tee/US // ˌkɒm əˈnæl ɪ ti //UK // (ˌkɒməˈnælɪtɪ) //

共同点,共性,共通性,共性问题

Related Words

Definitions

n.名词 noun
  1. 1

    plural com·mon·al·i·ties.

    • : a sharing of features or characteristics in common; possession or manifestation of common attributes.
    • : a feature or characteristic held in common: Historians perceive commonalities of behavior in many eras.
    • : commonalty.

Synonyms & Antonyms

Examples

  • The commonality with all the concept watches is really the message behind them, rather than the product itself.

  • Finding consensus or commonality could easily cede to an all-or-nothing politics, where parties seize as much power as possible in their short stints of control.

  • An accomplished home cook steeped in family food traditions, Kriel developed the concept of Kosherati to explore the commonalities of Jewish and Emirati cuisine, she explains.

  • So, the Authority Hacker team analyzed over one million search results for commonalities in the “how” and “why” of rich snippets.

  • Another commonality for the “island of misfit toys,” as Phetasy once called them, is a baptism through fire, often after being “canceled” by progressives.

  • Behind the scenes, the shows share many more points of commonality.

  • The tone of the original series is vastly different, with few points of commonality save for the talking dog.

  • Now, because of the commonality of the problem, he says, celebrities “are more apt to come forward and report these cases.”

  • It can show stature and authority and also exude commonality.

  • Men may be blind as bats—they usually are; and our Brown is worse than the commonality.

  • Seignory pierces through sacerdotalism; the commonality, through seignory.

  • And a death so unlike that usually meted out to criminals, as he himself to the commonality of men.

  • There is an old proverb of our country—‘Better the head of the commonality than the tail of the gentry.’

  • This great body of the commonality was to a remarkable degree still very purely Punic even in late Roman times.

commonalities - EE Dictionary | EE Dictionary