"Come into common usage" refers to when something began to be widely used or accepted. The timeline for this can vary depending on the specific subject or item being discussed.
In the most common usage, yes.
The silent letter in "neighbour" is the "h". It is not pronounced in common usage.
"Sert" is not a standard English word in common usage. It may be a misspelling or a word in a different language.
It depends on the usage, sometimes it is been and sometimes in come. Granny has been to see is twice (she is not there now visiting) Jane has come so we can start work (she is still there now)
The correct pronoun usage is "This is a great picture of her and me." "Her" should come first because it's referring to the person in the picture, and "me" should come after as the object of the preposition "of."
The term person in common usage means an individual human being. (prosopon in Greek)
The word graph means to write, and comes from the Greek word "graphein". Its most common usage is the suffix -graphy.
n.
"pogrom" came into common usage with extensive anti-Jewish riots that swept Ukraine and southern Russia in 1881-1884,
There is no standard collective noun for a group of laboratories. This is most likely that laboratories were not in groups frequently enough for a collective noun to come into common usage.
The most common usage at the moment is resupply for the ISS
A spectrometer is used to measure properties of light. The most common usage is as an instrument attached to a telescope for astronomers to measure the chemical elements in a star.
Debt cards were introduced in the early 1980s, but did not come into common usage until the introduction of the Interac Direct payment system in 1994.
The word narcotic, usually refers to derivatives of the opium plant, but common usage has come to include any drug that affects the brain in a similar way or is illegal.
It is believed to have been invented during the Roman Empire or Ancient Greece but there is no definite proof of where or when. It's all speculation, but their usefulness is pretty obvious.
In the most common usage, yes.
They came into common usage in the 20's when the bobbed hairstyle was all the rage. It was a trademark of a corporation & usage of the term became common place which invalidated the trademark.