cliché 1 of 2

variants also cliche

cliché

2 of 2

noun

variants also cliche

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of cliché
Noun
During his two-minute tribute, Dr. Robby — who’s suffering from acute existential exhaustion on top of the day’s extra-fine grind — falls back on a handful of cliches. Ben Travers, IndieWire, 11 Apr. 2025 The song, the first disco hit and an indelible gay anthem, here feels like a pandering cliche. Christian Lewis, Variety, 28 Mar. 2025 However, and forgive the cliche, but GenAI tools are evolving so fast that what got your organization here won’t get it there. Clint Boulton, Forbes, 25 Mar. 2025 Although spring training is the time for even the most downtrodden of teams to speak optimistically, the way that the Angels talk about Fasano goes beyond the normal cliches. Jeff Fletcher, Orange County Register, 25 Feb. 2025 Because of that opposite cliche: Spring evaluations are really hard. Tim Britton, The Athletic, 19 Feb. 2025 Some criticize the use of tropes as leaning on cliches or lacking originality, but tropes are as old as storytelling itself. Denise Williams, People.com, 15 Feb. 2025 However, the billionaire’s use of spending cliches to justify the approach was tough to argue with. Zak Garner-Purkis, Forbes, 23 Mar. 2025 Normally, that’s one of the most overused cliches in sports. Jeremy Rutherford, The Athletic, 17 Mar. 2025
Recent Examples of Synonyms for cliché
Adjective
  • At the time, Latinos were often cast in stereotyped roles with heavy accents and largely denied the opportunity to direct features.
    Maximilíano Durón, ARTnews.com, 17 Mar. 2025
  • Tragedies can be examined by those outside of its sphere of destruction, but the groundswell of feeling from Mexican viewers and critics is that there was little or no care taken to understand the cultural grief beyond stereotyped spectacle.
    Lucy Ford, TIME, 24 Jan. 2025
Noun
  • In a recent post on X (formerly Twitter), the musician suggested that accounts sharing generalizations about symptoms that could signify certain mental health conditions has led to an uptick in potentially harmful self-diagnoses.
    Larisha Paul, Rolling Stone, 24 Mar. 2025
  • In the heat of the moment, these phrases might feel justified—but to your partner, they’re heard as unfair generalizations.
    Mark Travers, Forbes, 10 Mar. 2025
Adjective
  • Robbins was mostly Black, a place built by Black people who were tired of racial conflict in Chicago.
    D. Watkins, The Atlantic, 10 Apr. 2025
  • Was Michelle ever tired of using the vibrator all the time in the show?
    Lexi Carson, HollywoodReporter, 9 Apr. 2025
Noun
  • Wednesday's bizarre, inexact, and amorphous Rose Garden rally was a series of endless platitudes.
    Jason D. Greenblatt, MSNBC Newsweek, 2 Apr. 2025
  • The Portuguese novelist José Saramago is a master of such ironies, in which a narrator’s bland clichés and platitudes hang in the air, neither quite owned nor quite disavowed, waiting to be ironized by the action of the novel.
    James Wood, New Yorker, 7 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • The movie’s a little more hackneyed and obvious now, but its central idea is still an undeniably creepy one: possessed children with pitchforks.
    Tim Grierson, Vulture, 21 Feb. 2025
  • Which is a nauseatingly hackneyed and clichéd — not to mention stupefyingly reductive — type of statement to make about any kind of art or entertainment, of course.
    Andrew Unterberger, Billboard, 3 Sep. 2019
Noun
  • The President’s sweeping orders confirm the truism that political shifts test the elasticity and resilience of American democracy.
    Blake D. Morant, Forbes.com, 3 Apr. 2025
  • The truism has it that most great New York magazine editors come from away—from the West or the Midwest or across the Atlantic—and arrive with an ability to see what natives don’t.
    Nathan Heller, The New Yorker, 15 Mar. 2025
Noun
  • Aston Villa and Borussia Dortmund were hoping to thwart Paris Saint-Germain’s and Barcelona’s charge for the Champions League trophy last week, but neither team were able to spin the underdog trope successfully.
    Brett Koremenos, New York Times, 14 Apr. 2025
  • So while many will talk about de-dollarization, a treasury bond collapse, runaway inflation – all the usual tropes – those aren’t necessary for gold to surge.
    Clem Chambers, Forbes.com, 11 Apr. 2025
Adjective
  • Direct trade models that are commonplace in the coffee industry are not so in the tea industry (albeit not unheard of), because of the way the majority of the latter operates through world market auctions and regional export/importers.
    Christopher Marquis, Forbes.com, 8 Apr. 2025
  • But for others, particularly younger Americans, this could be the season of life where receiving wedding invitations is commonplace, and the costs are adding up.
    Nerdwallet, Oc Register, 4 Apr. 2025

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Cite this Entry

“Cliché.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/clich%C3%A9. Accessed 22 Apr. 2025.

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