conventional



the conventional/received wisdom

knowledge or information that people generally believe is true, although in fact it is often false The conventional wisdom is that marriage makes a relationship more secure, but as the divorce rates show, this is not necessarily true.
See also: conventional, wisdom

conventional wisdom

A widely held belief on which most people act. For example, According to conventional wisdom, an incumbent nearly always wins more votes than a new candidate . This term was invented by John Kenneth Galbraith, who used it in The Affluent Society (1958) to describe economic ideas that are familiar, predictable, and therefore accepted by the general public. Today it is used in any context where public opinion has considerable influence on the course of events.
See also: conventional, wisdom

Common Names:

NameGenderPronouncedUsage
Xeno-Ancient Greek
SaŠA-Croatian, Serbian, Slovene
Ananth-Tamil, Indian, Telugu, Kannada
JÓHanna-Icelandic
Aenor-Ancient Germanic (Latinized)
Lelia-Italian