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Routine   /rutˈin/   Listen
Routine

noun
1.
An unvarying or habitual method or procedure.  Synonym: modus operandi.
2.
A short theatrical performance that is part of a longer program.  Synonyms: act, bit, number, turn.  "She had a catchy little routine" , "It was one of the best numbers he ever did"
3.
A set sequence of steps, part of larger computer program.  Synonyms: function, procedure, subprogram, subroutine.
adjective
1.
Found in the ordinary course of events.  Synonyms: everyday, mundane, quotidian, unremarkable, workaday.  "It was a routine day" , "There's nothing quite like a real...train conductor to add color to a quotidian commute"



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"Routine" Quotes from Famous Books



... one. The best of all cures is to provide every boy with some occupation which he indubitably loves. There are a good many boys whose work is not interesting to them, and a certain number to whom the prescribed games are a matter of routine rather than of active pleasure. Indeed it may be said that hardly any boys enjoy either work or games in which they see no possibility of any personal distinction. It is therefore of great importance that every boy whose chances of successful performance are ...
— Cambridge Essays on Education • Various

... apprehended. The flawless perfection of the Parnassians—of Heredia's sonnets—is nowhere approached in the less aristocratically exclusive poetry of to-day. But the future, in poetry also, is with the spirit which found the aristocracy of noble art not upon exclusions, negations, and routine, but upon imagination, penetration, discovery, and catholic openness ...
— Recent Developments in European Thought • Various

... walls of the celebrated gaming saloon had often witnessed scenes such as this. All those present acted by routine. The etiquette of duelling prescribed certain formalities, and these were strictly but rapidly ...
— I Will Repay • Baroness Emmuska Orczy

... excellence; but it was seldom that such readers could be found. It seems also that at an early period men became readers, not because they had any especial aptitude for offices of instruction, or because they had some especial fund of information—but simply because it was their turn to read. Routine placed them in the pulpit for a certain number of weeks; and when they had done all that routine required of them, and had thereby qualified themselves for promotion to the rank of sergeant, they took their seats amongst the benchers ...
— A Book About Lawyers • John Cordy Jeaffreson

... believing that when he opened his Bible at random the divine Spirit would guide him infallibly in his choice. The oratory of Whitefield was so impassioned that the preacher was sometimes scarcely able to proceed for his tears, while half the audience were convulsed with sobs. The love of order, routine, and decorum, which was the strongest feeling in the clerical mind, was violently shocked. The regular congregation was displaced by an agitated throng who had never before been seen within the precincts of the church. The usual quiet worship was disturbed by violent enthusiasm or violent ...
— The Great Events by Famous Historians, v. 13 • Various


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