/ˈjuː.ʒʊəl/, /ˈju.ʒuəl/, /ˈju.ʒəl/
OriginFrom Middle English usual, from Old French usuel, from Latin ūsuālis (“for use, fit for use, also of common use, customary, common, ordinary, usual”), from ūsus (“use, habit, custom”), from the past participle stem of ūtī (“to use”), possibly ultimately from Proto-Indo-European *h₃eyt- (“to take along, fetch”). Displaced native Old English ġewunelīċ.
- Most commonly occurring; typical.
“The preference of a boy to a girl is a usual occurrence in some parts of China.”
“It is becoming more usual these days to rear children as bilingual.”
- uncountableThe typical state of something, or something that is typical.
- colloquial, countableA specific good or service (e.g. a drink) that someone typically orders.
“I'll just have the usual.”
“Two usuals, please.”
Formsmore usual(comparative) · most usual(superlative) · uzhe(alternative) · uzh(alternative) · yoozh(alternative) · usuals(plural)
Source: Wiktionary — CC BY-SA 4.0