How to Use unremarkable in a Sentence

unremarkable

adjective
  • Their view of the port is unremarkable.
    Danielle Parker, CBS News, 3 Mar. 2026
  • These strategies are now unremarkable enough to be taught to kids in schools.
    Joshua Rothman, The New Yorker, 10 Dec. 2024
  • In the long run, their queerness may be one of the most unremarkable things about them.
    Aj Willingham, CNN, 21 Apr. 2022
  • For much of the last four years, that would’ve been an unremarkable sequence.
    Jack Harris, Los Angeles Times, 27 June 2025
  • But in many diseases, the brain looks unremarkable at first glance.
    Kat McGowan, Discover Magazine, 1 Aug. 2011
  • His camp to that point had been unremarkable, other than a couple of bad drops.
    Jonas Shaffer, baltimoresun.com, 9 Aug. 2021
  • The bathroom is clean and unremarkable, though the bowl sink may drive you a bit insane.
    Katie McDonough, Curbed, 15 Dec. 2025
  • If three of your friends are about to be therapists, that seems kind of unremarkable.
    Annah Feinberg, New Yorker, 7 Apr. 2026
  • Her father wore an unremarkable shirt and pants.
    Madhuri Vijay, New Yorker, 16 Nov. 2025
  • That may seem unremarkable today, but that hasn’t always been the case.
    Anthony Man, Sun Sentinel, 11 June 2022
  • But, alas, other than passing through a toll booth, the change was unremarkable.
    Kevin Fisher-Paulson, San Francisco Chronicle, 22 Mar. 2022
  • From the street, the little brown house was unremarkable yet pleasant.
    New York Times, 25 July 2022
  • To the untrained eye, these unremarkable slides seem filthy—each looks like it’s been smudged by dirty fingers.
    Jack Tamisiea, WIRED, 24 Sep. 2022
  • To most, that was unremarkable.
    Bobby Allyn, NPR, 17 Jan. 2026
  • For those outside the culture, this dish may seem unremarkable.
    Sami Tamimi august 6, Literary Hub, 6 Aug. 2025
  • The rest of his profile is solid but unremarkable.
    John Hollinger, New York Times, 20 June 2026
  • Other than more than a decade on drugs, Lori leads a fairly unremarkable life.
    Anchorage Daily News, 12 Feb. 2018
  • The bar is on an unremarkable strip far from Sin City’s bright lights and casinos.
    Will Coviello, NOLA.com, 10 Aug. 2020
  • In another era, the scene would have been unremarkable.
    ABC News, 19 Feb. 2026
  • Mayor Kenny was unremarkable from the neck down, dressed all in black.
    Diane Mastrull, Philly.com, 1 Apr. 2018
  • Here, too, the Sonata earns a passing grade by being unremarkable.
    Car and Driver, 14 Feb. 2018
  • The interior decor is unremarkable, but the forest of palm trees in front of the ocean helps make up for it.
    Condé Nast, Condé Nast Traveler, 1 July 2026
  • The action is unremarkable, and the aesthetic all blends into a kind of bluish-gray blur.
    Katie Walsh, Twin Cities, 24 July 2025
  • The lower-end one is better, but unremarkable.
    Michael J. Miller, PC Magazine, 3 June 2026
  • Weltman’s draft picks outside the lottery have been unremarkable as well.
    Letters To The Editor, The Orlando Sentinel, 10 May 2026
  • This was a very unremarkable year in baseball card collecting, as far as value.
    Curtis Silver, Forbes.com, 13 Aug. 2025
  • Birds were a comforting but unremarkable part of the world’s backdrop.
    Literary Hub, 5 Jan. 2026
  • On the outside, the Broadway shop’s an unremarkable slot in a tan strip mall near the airport.
    Mike Sutter, ExpressNews.com, 17 Jan. 2020
  • In the kitchen and the bathrooms, for instance, the walls and floors were both unremarkable and somehow perfect.
    Burkhard Bilger, The New Yorker, 23 Nov. 2020
  • George, the book’s main character, lives a truly unremarkable life — a sort of shadow of what might have been.
    Frank Viva, New York Times, 15 Dec. 2017

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'unremarkable.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

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