undistinguished

[ UK /ʌndɪstˈɪŋɡwɪʃt/ ]
[ US /ˌəndɪˈstɪŋɡwɪʃt/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. not special in any way; lacking distinction
    run-of-the-mill boxing
    your run-of-the-mine college graduate
    a unexceptional an incident as can be found in a lawyer's career
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How To Use undistinguished In A Sentence

  • A couple of undistinguished losses hastened the end of his career.
  • Named one of Parliament's deputy lieutenants in March 1642, his subsequent military record was undistinguished.
  • It's light-hearted fun in another week of undistinguished dross.
  • It is populist to promise that prices will be lower, but price controls have an undistinguished history. Times, Sunday Times
  • London is one undistinguished mass of soot and fogginess.
  • This applies especially to fancy forms with frills and tassels that in a multiple crown produce an undistinguished tangle. Times, Sunday Times
  • The undistinguished career for the first Delgado racer had come to a very abrupt end.
  • They've stripped the ceiling back to reveal the girders and piping, like some dated metropolitan style bar, yet they've kept the chandelier and the flock wallpaper and painted everything else an undistinguished sludgy brown.
  • This undistinguished youth was to explode into a prominence no one had anticipated.
  • Until 1994, when he was elected governor of Texas, Bush was known as the undistinguished son of a distinguished father.
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