unremarkable

[ US /ənɹɪˈmɑɹkəbəɫ/ ]
[ UK /ˌʌnɹɪmˈɑːkəbə‍l/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. found in the ordinary course of events
    it was a routine day
    a placid everyday scene
    there's nothing quite like a real...train conductor to add color to a quotidian commute
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How To Use unremarkable In A Sentence

  • The utterly unremarkable Agriculture Minister of Canada's Brand Spankin' New North Star Ultra-Government has debagged the cat. Archive 2008-02-01
  • Something I'd not reckoned on is the rather fine view of the old ranch house, snuggled down on the ridge of its unremarkable and unnamed hill and looking really rather attractive.
  • This story would be highly unremarkable if not for the fact that William Gibson, author of Neuromancer and cyberpunk pioneer, wrote a little rhapsody to the Selectric type ball.
  • In North America, it's so unremarkable that you needn't waste any time categorizing it.
  • When I finally saw the film, after over a year of hoopla surrounding it, its director, and the director's father, I found it to be a wholly unremarkable film.
  • Once again, it was OK to wear ordinary clothes, ordinary shoes and live somewhere unremarkable.
  • This album exposes him as an unremarkable singer, largely devoid of charisma or vocal prowess.
  • The food is edible but unremarkable, usually a meal that could be found in just about any basic cookbook: chicken cacciatore, beef teriyaki, veal parmigiana, pasta trio, roast beef or stuffed cabbage.
  • The result is a highly inoffensive, passable sound which has its interesting, if unremarkable, moments.
  • But it's unremarkable in its style, galloping along like a transcript of a conversation you might hear on a bus.
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