commoners in English

noun
1
an ordinary person, without rank or title.
A truly democratic medium, the radio is accessible to everybody, and as a result the famous and infamous, the royalty and commoners , all tune in and talk to each other.
2
a person who has the right of common (commonage).
The Act of 1965 dealt with these problems by creating local registers of common land and town and village greens which recorded the rights, if any, of the commoners and the names of the owners of the land.
3
(at some British universities) an undergraduate who does not have a scholarship.
In 1596, aged 14, he was enrolled as gentleman commoner at University College, Oxford.
noun
    common mancommon person

Use "commoners" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "commoners" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "commoners", or refer to the context using the word "commoners" in the English Dictionary.

1. Can't commoners be women too?

2. Commoners would receive an allotment of land.

3. This class included all poor commoners, peasants and laborers.

4. Commoners are nothing if not unyielding and persevering!

5. Commoners include peasants, serfs, slaves, servants, pilgrims, merchants, artisans, and hermits.

6. All ponies free-roaming on Dartmoor are owned and protected by Dartmoor Commoners.

7. It served above all to denote the superior status of chiefs against commoners.

8. Commoner Commoners include peasants, serfs, Slaves, servants, pilgrims, merchants, artisans, and hermits.

9. It was not acceptable for royalty to marry commoners in those days.

10. Synonyms for Canaille include masses, mob, populace, proletariat, rabble, riffraff, scum, commoners, plebs and ragtag

11. Synonyms for Bourgeoisies include plebs, publics, populaces, commoners, commons, plebeians, commonalities, bourgeois, citizens and civilians

12. Another popular money-making scheme saw some "greedy princes" expropriate land from commoners.

13. His court also tried to lighten the tax burden on commoners by reducing tax rates.

14. This facilitated the traditional exchange of religious ideas, the carriage of goods, travellers, kings and commoners.

15. From royalty of the past to commoners of the present, people worldwide have been captivated by the elegance of silk.

16. Still, "-- Coquettishly, --" that is no reason why I should look coldly upon all commoners

17. The Reports gave close attention to the vexed question of enclosures and commoners' rights in the forest.

18. In past times, people were born as commoners, as part of an aristocracy, or even as members of royalty.

19. 1 Overview 2 In-Game 2.1 Growth Rates 2.2 Class Skills 3 Notable Commoners 3.1 Three Houses Commoners are one of two base classes available to every unit in the game; the only difference between them and Noble is the 5% Charm growth available to Nobles

20. Some of her quotes do sound Blesseder-than-thou, Marie Antoinette-esque in their disconnection from the lives we mere commoners experience

21. The Cimmerian commoners buried the bodies along the river Tyras and fled from the Scythian advance, across the Caucasus and into Anatolia

22. Thus high office remains accessible to a relatively wide range of royal kin and commoners wield significant power over the succession.

23. Commoner definition: In countries which have a nobility, Commoners are the people who are not members of the Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples

24. In later generations, they were constantly deified and became a spirit-like way of instruction used by the ruling class to practice obscurantism on the commoners.

25. The Commoner in Downtown Pittsburgh At our gastropub, we don’t distinguish between Commoners and kings; we just want to feed the good people of Pittsburgh

26. This is given a x 10 bonus for Commoners and is part of the pool that ticks and adds to Commoner XP every in-game hour.

27. Think of the cool new Brobdingnagian Sports Chair as your portable throne away from your castle when you're forced to sit amongst the commoners at outdoor events

28. A member of a British hereditary order of honor, ranking below the barons and made up of commoners, designated by Sir before the name and Baronet, usually abbreviated Bart., after: Sir John Smith, Bart.

29. Baronet definition, a member of a British hereditary order of honor, ranking below the Barons and made up of commoners, designated by Sir before the name and Baronet, usually abbreviated Bart., after: Sir John Smith, Bart

30. 1 Description 2 Qualification 3 Attributes and stats 3.1 Base attributes 3.2 Base stats 4 Suitabilities 5 Skills 5.1 Commoner Skills 6 Life quests 7 See also 8 External links Careers Advisor Commoners mainly manufacture items

31. ‘Diana, on the other hand, was a Commoner (albeit an aristocrat) who worked in a common job when her engagement to Prince Charles was announced.’ ‘Not that we would have, anyway - when an aristocrat orders, the Commoners obey.’

32. ‘Diana, on the other hand, was a Commoner (albeit an aristocrat) who worked in a common job when her engagement to Prince Charles was announced.’ ‘Not that we would have, anyway - when an aristocrat orders, the Commoners obey.’

33. Queenhithe is one of 25 wards in the City of London, each electing an alderman to the Court of Aldermen, and commoners (the City equivalent of a Councillor) to the Court of Common Council of the City of London Corporation.

34. Lords, commoners, and reverend bishops, with little distinction of person or party, were kicked and pinched and hustled; passed from hand to hand through various stages of ill-usage; and sent to their fellow-senators at last with their clothes hanging in ribands about them, their Bagwigs torn off, themselves speechless and breathless, and their persons covered with the powder which had been