View example sentences and word forms for Cliches.

Cliches

Cliches | Cliche

Cliches meaning

plural of cliche

Example sentences (20)

All signs point there, as the band looks to tell their stories in a language that doesn’t feel so puffed up with pretty filler or rewritten cliches.

And if we made it too passive, quickly passing on some fleeting cliches and good feelings, we would not be leveraging the specific ritual acts rooted in history, consecrated by history, which convey values not just stories, maintaining continuity.

I guess what I’m saying is: If you want to make a movie that’s loaded with cliches, make sure it’s as weird as possible.

It will be tempting to dismiss the GSI as a grab bag of cliches.

Sackings in football are commonly phrased in the same sentence as cliches such as "on the beach next week" and "hefty pay-offs".

Stewart said: “It’s in our hands and now it comes down to fitness, how much you want it and all those cliches.

That persona, however, is fake, an occasional role he assumes to appeal to the political center with cliches about “the world being against us” and the need to close ranks.

There should be a negotiated settlement, but when I watch the State Department lightweights on our side coughing up stuttering cliches on tv news blips, I know in my bones they're not up to it.

Amazon's slick spy thriller Citadel pulls from famous spy movies of the past, but it reuses one of the genre's oldest cliches to its advantage.

And that is perhaps where the football cliches end – because to achieve our shared economic ambitions, we need to call time on a political culture that prioritises competition rather than collaboration between different governments within the UK.

He was brilliant at assessing sport and dismantling the cliches that surround it.

It is possible to hope that, on Ukraine at least, U.S.-Russian talks can quickly move beyond cliches and labels, to stop the killing.

Mangione was a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity at Penn, and I’m sorry for trafficking in cliches, but in photos from his time there he’s the handsomest all-American frat boy there ever was – athletic, and in extremely good shape.

Remember that without cliches, platitudes, pigeonholes, conventional wisdom and hackneyed ideas, life would be nearly impossible.

The show pokes plenty of fun at the cliches surrounding public education in major cities but is never too sharp-elbowed.

All the more frustrating, then, when the film’s third act lurches into coming-of-age cliches, including a fade-to-black snog at a beachside bonfire.

And while isekai is beaten on for being full of cliches and having ridiculously long titles, some are quite good and have never been licensed in English.

But it’s not nice enough to compensate for the prefabricated dialogue, platitudes and cliches running around them like an army of evil elves throwing rocks.

Harsher reviews have labelled the film, which was also co-produced by Robbie and her husband Tom Ackerley, full of “cliches”.

It was kind of slow and full of cliches but I found it pretty enjoyable overall.