Use "trite|triter|tritest" in a sentence

1. The heading is trite.

2. It costs not trite than 50 dollars.

3. His remarks were trite and commonplace.

4. You reject everything that is garish and trite.

5. That was true no matter how trite It'sounded.

6. Unoriginal; trite: used Copybook phrases in the essay.

7. Besides, I reasoned they would be trite.

8. This point may now seem obvious or even trite.

9. This, too, trite, but its inherent truth is undeniable.

10. Unoriginal; trite: used Copybook phrases in the essay.

11. He ended his lecture with a trite morality.

12. What does Corny mean? Unsophisticated, old-fashioned, trite, sentimental, etc

13. It is a trite simile to compare her teeth to pearls.

14. As trite as the saying has become, it remains nonetheless true.

15. It's trite, when talking about him, to talk about Courageousness

16. And he ended with a homily, trite or profound according to taste.

17. It is a trite simile to compare her teeth to pearls.Sentence dictionary

18. Trite: a Banal and sophomoric treatment of courage on the frontier

19. Finally, It'sounds trite but the secret really is to keep talking.

20. 6 And he ended with a homily, trite or profound according to taste.

21. I know it sounds trite, but you're so lucky to have your son.

22. Ponygirl services and Bedizens the trite, the disposable, throwaway objects, or things that need…

23. Bathos can also be used more broadly for something that’s trite or overly sentimental.

24. The film is a farrago of trite emotions, one-note acting and embarrassing lines.

25. I know it might sound like a trite remark, but mothers usually know best.

26. I know it will sound trite, but I've loved being part of this club.

27. The result shows that total triterpenes of Lagerstroemia specious L could promote the glucose consumption and inhibit the fat formation. Total triter...

28. Contrived plotting, such as marriages of convenience, trite misunderstandings and mistaken identities, should be avoided.

29. Anecdote chestnut An old, stale joke; a trite, oft-repeated tale or story

30. Most of the critical treatises in the classical tradition are trite and commonplace.

31. Synonyms for Conventionalized include stereotyped, banal, hackneyed, stale, tired, trite, conventional, standard, corny and overused

32. In the trite words of many a wedding speech, they have gained a son or daughter.

33. He had something to prove, something that would sound trite if it were put into words.

34. Synonyms for Cliched include hackneyed, unoriginal, trite, dull, stereotypical, corny, overused, timeworn, unimaginative and lifeless

35. His lyrics about love and peace are too trite for me to take them seriously.

36. Drearily commonplace and often predictable; trite: "Blunt language cannot hide a Banal conception" (James Wolcott)

37. This trite communication put an end to Emma's overtures and she began to fade from their lives.

38. And it was like a lot of you, kind of a prosaic example, kind of trite.

39. A Banal or trite lyric, however, can be - with the right vocal cords - brilliantly and shatteringly conveyed

40. Banal definition, devoid of freshness or originality; hackneyed; trite: a Banal and sophomoric treatment of courage on the frontier

41. Pack it tight, add basketball footage as dramatic as it is trite, and throw it into the Hollywood Plot Machine.

42. Cant definition is - the expression or repetition of conventional or trite opinions or sentiments; especially : the insincere use of pious words

43. Though, as times change, our definitions of what is ‘trite’, what is ‘banal’, and what is ‘commonplace’ also change; Cliches always remain Cliches.

44. Unoriginal, banal, trite, hackneyed, dull, old-fashioned, stereotyped, commonplace, feeble, stale, cheesy (informal), old hat I know it sounds Corny, but I'm not motivated by money

45. Bromide nounplatitude, cliché, banality, truism, commonplace, chestnut(informal), old saw, trite remark, hackneyed saying orphraseThe same old Bromides were used to justify failure

46. Bromide noun platitude, cliché, banality, truism, commonplace, chestnut (informal), old saw, trite remark, hackneyed saying or phrase The same old Bromides were used to justify failure

47. 15 We’ve all heard the trite “time is money” catchphrase, but what relevance does it have in day to day life in terms of improving your financial situation?

48. (trite statement) luogo comune nm sostantivo maschile: Identifica un essere, un oggetto o un concetto che assume genere maschile: medico, gatto, strumento, assegno, dolore : It's a Commonplace that we use only a …

49. Banality: 1 n a trite or obvious remark Synonyms: bromide , cliche , commonplace , platitude Type of: comment , input , remark a statement that expresses a personal opinion or belief or adds information truism an obvious truth

50. It’s been a term of derision only since the 1930s, when something that was “Corny” or “cornfed” or “on the cob” was rustic, countrified, old-fashioned, or behind the times – and hence trite or hackneyed.

51. It has been made trite law, since Torkington v Magee, that a Chose in action is a legal expression used to describe all personal rights of property which can only be claimed or enforced by action

52. It can be hard to talk about something emotional without becoming Corny. Try describing love at first sight without becoming trite or stickily sentimental and you'll know first-hand how easily you can find yourself sounding Corny.

53. In the first stanza the knight (pardon this incredibly trite expression) finds joy in the journey–gaily Bedighted (1) (I need to find out what in the heck bedight means (I just found out at onlinedictionary.com) that it means to decorate or dress)

54. Beaten (comparative more Beaten, superlative most Beaten) defeated; repeatedly struck, or formed or flattened by blows a Beaten path; Beaten gold; the Beaten victims of the attack (cooking, of a liquid) mixed by paddling with a wooden spoon or other implement trite; hackneyed; Derived terms

55. ‘It's as Abhorrent and repellent and disgusting to me as it ever was.’ ‘The combination of horrific makeup, Abhorrent timing, and trite jokes has literally become painful.’ ‘The idea that covenant marriage ought to be sanctioned by the state is illiberal, reprehensible and Abhorrent.’

56. This page shows answers to the clue Commonplace, followed by 6 definitions like “Common; ordinary; trite”, “To utter Commonplaces” and “Humdrum not challenging”.Synonyms for Commonplace are for example banal, boring and clichéd.More synonyms can be found below the puzzle answers.

57. A settler's store was first started, followed by a blacksmith, butcher, and a number of others chosen in various capacities, ostensibly for the benefit of 'poor Lo,' 'Affidavy' easy conscience witness­men, for the boss, and, as a trite saying goes 'hell was fully inaugurated.

58. ‘it sounds Corny, but as soon as I saw her I knew she was the one’ ‘It may sound trite, cliche, Corny, even, but I would like to thank my parents.’ ‘There's nothing Corny about her sentimental soul - the music has classic written all over it.’

59. Many former class Annalists have succumbed to the temptation to end their letters with the last line of the original version of Carissima — you know, “We still will be…?” But I know that if I did that, I’d choke up, and then Ric Leavenworth would start to cry, and it would get all soppy — and frankly a little trite.

60. A bromide is a common saying or proverb that is obvious and not that helpful, like "When life hands you lemons, make lemonade." Some people love to say things like "Follow your dreams" and "Love takes hard work." Such trite, clichéd sayings are Bromides. A bromide …

61. Banal "trite, commonplace," 1840, from French Banal, "belonging to a manor; common, hackneyed, commonplace," from Old French banel "communal" (13c.), from ban "decree; legal control; announcement; authorization; payment for use of a communal oven, mill, etc.," from a Germanic source, from Proto-Germanic *bannan "to speak publicly, used of different kinds of proclamations (see ban (v.)).