See also: commonsensical

English edit

Adjective edit

common-sensical (comparative more common-sensical, superlative most common-sensical)

  1. Alternative form of commonsensical
    • 1841, Catherine Gore, Cecil, or, The Adventures of a Coxcomb:
      But plain, rational, common-sensical conversation, uttered by an agreeable girl [] , wraps one round with a consciousness of comfort and repose.
    • 2008 April 19, Arnold Zwicky, “And/or or both”, in Language Log:
      Most people seem to take the common-sensical view that or sometimes functions inclusively and sometimes exclusively, and this is the position that the OED takes.