of or relating to every day; daily: an everyday occurrence.
of or for ordinary days, as contrasted with Sundays, holidays, or special occasions: everyday clothes.
such as is met with every day; ordinary; commonplace: a placid, everyday scene.
noun
the routine or ordinary day or occasion: We use inexpensive plates for everyday.
Origin of everyday
First recorded in 1325–75, everyday is from the Middle English word everydayes.See every, day
SYNONYMS FOR everyday
2, 3 workday, common, usual.
SEE SYNONYMS FOR everyday ON THESAURUS.COM
OTHER WORDS FROM everyday
eve·ry·day·ness,noun
Words nearby everyday
every, every bit, everybody, Everybody will be world famous for fifteen minutes, Every cloud has a silver lining, everyday, Every dog has his day, every dog has its day, everyhow, every inch, every inch a ___
Books like these are intensely personal by nature, packed with the recipes that everyday people believe are good enough to share with the world.
The Joy of Cooking Other People’s ‘Secret Family Recipes’|Amy McCarthy|September 11, 2020|Eater
With well over 10% of the workforce currently out of a job, many everyday Americans simply don’t have the money to spend at local businesses.
How we can save small business from coronavirus-induced extinction|matthewheimer|September 10, 2020|Fortune
The technology industry must develop other 5G applications that will impact the everyday consumer.
Why the coronavirus pandemic has made 5G more essential than ever|jakemeth|September 7, 2020|Fortune
Childcare, Warren said, is as critical to our economy and everyday lives as the roads we drive on or the Internet that connects us to work, entertainment, and each other—in other words, childcare is an integral infrastructure investment.
Millennials and Gen Zers need better childcare. Can either Biden or Trump deliver?|matthewheimer|August 29, 2020|Fortune
While a small majority of Americans own stocks, the S&P 500 isn’t really a driving force in their everyday lives, and the richest Americans own the lion’s share of the market.
Trump’s spent years touting the stock market. At the RNC, he just … didn’t.|Emily Stewart|August 28, 2020|Vox
After three weeks of high-energy crisis management, Pragnell returned to his everyday office work.
House of the Witch: The Renegade Craft Brewers of Panama|Jeff Campagna|November 30, 2014|DAILY BEAST
The everyday stress, wondering if the other shoe was going to drop and I was going to be outed, is what led to me outing myself.
Exclusive: Michael Phelps’s Intersex Self-Proclaimed Girlfriend, Taylor Lianne Chandler, Tells All|Aurora Snow|November 26, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Not until someone catches on video one small glimpse of your everyday reality and even then, can you get justice?
‘Why Have I Lost Control?’: Cory Booker in ’92 on Rodney King Echoes Ferguson|Cory Booker|November 26, 2014|DAILY BEAST
ISIS, the more common name for the so-called Islamic State, is a threat to everyday Americans.
Ebola, ISIS, the Border: So Much to Fear, So Little Time!|Gene Robinson|November 2, 2014|DAILY BEAST
But even she is not immune from the everyday misogyny of some players.
Is ‘Magic: The Gathering’ Immune to GamerGate Misogyny?|David Levesley|October 29, 2014|DAILY BEAST
If that is so, everybody will be flying in time, and the professional aviator will be just a common, everyday person.
Airship Andy|Frank V. Webster
Among moss-grown ruins one sees a marvellous future glistening; and what used to be common and everyday, now seems miraculous.
Main Currents in Nineteenth Century Literature, Vol. II (of 6): The Romantic School in Germany|Georg Brandes
Nothing can be more marvelous than the common and everyday facts of life.
The Works of Robert G. Ingersoll, Vol. 3 (of 12)|Robert G. Ingersoll
It is just such absurdities and inconsistencies that people commit when the starch of everyday habits has been washed out of them.
Knut Hamsun|Hanna Astrup Larsen
She went back to her home on the Grande Anse and endeavored to take up her everyday life again as though nothing had happened.
Cape Breton Tales|Harry James Smith
British Dictionary definitions for everyday
everyday
/ (ˈɛvrɪˌdeɪ) /
adjective
happening each day; daily
commonplace or usual; ordinary
suitable for or used on ordinary days as distinct from Sundays or special days