We study the sample complexity of sample average approximation (SAA) and its simple variations, referred to as the regularized SAA (RSAA), in solving convex and strongly convex stochastic programming (SP) problems under heavy-tailed-ness, non-Lipschitz-ness, and/or high dimensionality. The presence of such irregularities underscores critical vacua in the literature. In response, this paper presents three sets of results: First, we show that the (R)SAA is effective even if the objective function is not necessarily Lipschitz and the underlying distribution admits some bounded central moments only at (near-)optimal solutions. Second, when the SP's objective function is the sum of a smooth term and a Lipschitz term, we prove that the (R)SAA's sample complexity is completely independent from any complexity measures (e.g., the covering number) of the feasible region. Third, we explicate the (R)SAA's sample complexities with regard to the dependence on dimensionality $d$: When some $p$th ($p\geq 2$) central moment of the underlying distribution is bounded, we show that the required sample size grows at a rate no worse than $\mathcal O\left(p d^{2/p}\right)$ under any one of the three structural assumptions: (i) strong convexity w.r.t. the $q$-norm ($q\geq 1$); (ii) the combination of restricted strong convexity and sparsity; and (iii) a dimension-insensitive $q$-norm of an optimal solution. In both cases of (i) and (iii), it is further required that $p\leq q/(q-1)$. As a direct implication, the (R)SAA's complexity becomes (poly-)logarithmic in $d$, whenever $p\geq c\cdot \ln d$ is admissible for some constant $c>0$. These new results deviate from the SAA's typical sample complexities that grow polynomially with $d$. Part of our proof is based on the average-replace-one (RO) stability, which appears to be novel for the (R)SAA's analyses.