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  1. Dictionary
    normal
    /ˈnɔːml/

    adjective

    noun

    • 1. the usual, typical, or expected state or condition: "her temperature was above normal"
    • 2. a line at right angles to a given line or surface: technical "the view is along the normal to the surface"

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. An example of misuse is our use of the word ‘nominal’, which most of the English-speaking world interprets as meaning small, minimal-and we usually use it in the sense of being average or normal. 1970 R. Turnill Lang. Space 94 Nominal, a favourite word, meaning within prescribed limits; anything from ‘perfect’ to acceptable.

  3. Jan 4, 2013 · Ah, it's an instantiation of the "X is the new Y" snowclone (also see here and here), like "pink is the new red" or "ugly is the new cute" or "Google is the new Microsoft". It means (to claim) that AD&SOA, or whatever they represent, are now so common that they're normal now, and constitute the new (normal) state of the world. Share.

  4. Jun 25, 2019 · At the very end of the live-stream for the nominal SpaceX STP-2 mission, the presenter places what appears to be a baseball cap onto the table. It reads "NORMINAL" (sic). My first thought was how embarrassing, they mixed up the spelling of "normal" and "nominal", but as English is clearly harder than rocket science, I'm turning to the ...

  5. Jun 7, 2016 · 1857, "mathematical condition of being at right angles," from normal + -cy. Associated since c. 1920 with U.S. president Warren G. Harding and derided as an example of his incompetent speaking style. Previously used mostly in the mathematical sense. The word preferred by purists for "a normal situation" is normality (1849). (Source: Etymology ...

  6. Oct 23, 2011 · 0. An "average" person is a normal person BY DEFINITION. "Normal" means "close to" average (in statistics), but plus or minus. It is this "plus or minus" part that allows "normal" to be NOT average. Even so, it would mean that the deviation from average is a "normal" or usual amount, and not "way out." Share.

  7. Dec 16, 2014 · Aside from a smattering of instances where "the new normal school" is truncated to "the new normal," the earliest instance in a Google Books search over the years 1800–1923, of "the new normal," where normal is used a noun, is from December 1917. But then a rash of such instances appear in five-year period from 1918–1922, including the one ...

  8. The answer I point to say that it is not normal, but it is common. This is an interesting differentiation of the two terms. The situation is common in the meaning that similar cases occur many places, and many are in a similar situation. But it is not normal, as this is not how it should be.

  9. Normally states that the occurrence is the norm, not that any other outcome would be weird, but that the normal outcome is the most commonly occurring (or the mode). Use of normally implies that there is a norm, which generally and usually don't.

  10. Aug 15, 2023 · The use of pejoratives is quite common (that is, normal) in several contexts and community groups, including online gaming, even if it is not socially acceptable in FCC broadcasts, white collar offices, or in many families. In other words, socially unacceptable situations are normal. –

  11. BCE/CE usually refers to the Common Era (the years are the same as AD/BC). That is, BC is usually understood to mean "Before the Common Era" and CE to mean "Common Era," though it is possible to reinterpret the abbreviations as "Christian Era." The simplest reason for using BCE/CE as opposed to AD/BC is to avoid reference to Christianity and ...