A dime a dozen

Something that is very common, plentiful, or of little value because it's so easily found. It describes things or people that lack rarity or special worth.

This American phrase emerged in the 1930s during the Great Depression when a dime had significant purchasing power. The expression originally referred to items so cheap and abundant that you could buy twelve of them for just ten cents, emphasizing their low individual value.

πŸ“– Full word page β€” etymology, 47 translations, audio πŸ”‘ Get Free API Key β€” 50 lookups/day πŸ“š Read the Docs β€” integrate Word Orb