typical - normal, usual, regular
The typical high school girl wanted to be popular.
The typical American has a house with one kitchen and two bathrooms.
A preposition.
She ordered her typical morning coffee with cream and sugar.
No, the word 'typical' is an adjective; a word used to describe a noun as having the distinctive qualities of a particular type of person or thing; representative or characteristic (a typical work day; a typical roadside diner).A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence; for example:My brother lives in Ohio. He is home for a visit this week. (the pronoun 'he' takes the place of the noun 'brother' is the second sentence)
Some people do not follow typical protocol for emergencies
There are three/3 syllables in the word typical.
"A typical ploy is to feign illness, procure medicine, then sell it on the black market" (Jill Smolowe).
Commemorate + to remember as a group very typical at funerals we are here to commemorate the life of John
The word "atypical" is defined as literally not typical or not usual. An example of a sentence using the word "atypical" is "His reaction to the medication is atypical."
Bear in mind that "was" is the past tense of the verb "to be" and therefore is always a verb. A typical sentence would be: I was happy to see you.
I'm not your typical fourth-grader. That's just a typical horned toad.
Word order refers to the specific arrangement of words in a sentence, which typically follows a certain structure in a given language. The order of words affects the meaning and clarity of a sentence. In English, the typical word order is subject-verb-object, but this can vary in other languages.