A new house or dwelling-place is commonly regarded as dangerous, a wall or a tower is liable to fall down and cause destruction of life, a bridge may break, or the person who crosses it may tumble into the water and be drowned.
As we have seen before, blood is commonly regardedas a particularly efficient conductor of curses, and what could in this respect be more excellent than the blood of the very person who utters the curse?
The harm caused by it may only be imaginary; indeed, forbidden food is commonly regarded as unwholesome, whatever be the original ground on which it was prohibited.
Welsh glaive, or Welsh hook, a weapon of war used in former times by the Welsh, commonly regarded as a kind of poleax.
The statement of these changes is commonly regarded as forming part of Grimm's law, because included in it as originally framed.
In Roman literature the Iron Age is commonly regarded as beginning after the taking of Rome by the Goths, A.
This direction towards an object is commonly regarded as typical of every form of cognition, and sometimes of mental life altogether.
From this it is an easy step to the conclusion that an animal's desire is nothing but a characteristic of a certain series of actions, namely, those which would be commonly regarded as inspired by the desire in question.
One way collects together the appearances commonly regarded as a given object from different places; this is, broadly speaking, the way of physics, leading to the construction of physical objects as sets of such appearances.
It iscommonly regarded as the first day of the Church Year, and as such the Christian's New Year's Day.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "commonly regarded" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.