View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Truism.
Truism meaning
A self-evident or obvious truth. | A banality or cliché.
Synonyms of Truism
Example sentences (20)
While it is a truism that identities matter, it is also a truism that when they are carelessly ascribed, they become inimical to freedom.
Actions speak louder than words” is a truism that applies well to St. Joseph.
Let us now turn to a truism we think is more useful than Templeton’s.
About the previous assertion, it’s hardly novel or insightful unless the most basic truism in economics is novel or insightful.
I learned long ago in my landscape architecture education a truism that still holds: You cannot solve a social problem with an architectural design.
It is a truism that we get the leaders we deserve.
Often dismissed as an urban myth, one truism about British diplomacy is that you’re never more than six feet away from a Winston Churchill quote.
The truism is actually true now: We don’t know what is going to happen next.
This is a truism that’s sinking in, and it’s something I’ve always believed, which is, you should tell your own story.
Allen said the truism that “we’re all in this together right now” will keep Seven and its banking syndicate “fine”.
And the statistical truism that “correlation does not imply causation” obviously applies.
But there's considerable truth to the internet truism that the memorably bitter Clinton-Sanders campaign has never ended and keeps reasserting itself in different forms, even now that both principals have eased themselves into the political sunset.
If anything, the novel is an ode to the truism that all it takes for evil to succeed is for good men to do nothing.
Bode has learned a truism about toads, too.
In 1974 Arthur Laffer, an economist, sketched a simple diagram on the back of a napkin to illustrate a truism of tax policy.
Is a maximum truism sublime.
This truism is reinforced by Huawei's generous offers.
And to throw in another truism, prevention is better than cure.
It has become a truism to declare that a country's human capital is its greatest resource.
It is a truism of economics that widespread increases in productivity are required to generate equally widespread increases in income and capital, i.e. productive wealth.