English edit

Etymology edit

un- +‎ weird

Adjective edit

unweird (comparative more unweird, superlative most unweird)

  1. Not weird or strange; normal.
    • 2006, Emily Carson, Renate Huber, Intuition and the Axiomatic Method, page 174:
      Thus let us assume an unweird model of the cosmos in which the handedness of objects is a well-defined global property, in relation to the background metric of space-time.
    • 2009, Josie Bloss, Band Geeked Out:
      We talked around things for a few minutes, sticking to the unweird stuff like how Alex was finishing up her finals and my AP tests and graduation.

Anagrams edit