catchphrase

View Synonyms
[ UK /kˈæt‍ʃfɹe‍ɪz/ ]
NOUN
  1. a phrase that has become a catchword
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How To Use catchphrase In A Sentence

  • Where would the humble technology reporter - or indeed the amusing news story - be without the bizarre and eclectic concoction of memes, and catchphrases that the internet has provided us with over the years?
  • There are no catchphrases to chant, no silly walks and definitely no dead parrots. Times, Sunday Times
  • He then used his mobile to write the film villain's catchphrase'Why so serious! The Sun
  • The public soon learned to associate the catchphrase 'Ooh, you are awful' with the inimitable Dick Emery.
  • It was a catchphrase for national shame now, applicable to virtually every snafu.
  • Unfortunately, the argument is made with such perseverated, autistic-like frequency that even politicians on the Democratic side feel pressured to echo the same sentiments, though sugar-coated catchphrases fully acessorized with vague, impotent reassurances. Jeanine Molloff: The Character Issue, FISA and The Constitution
  • Creating some faux persona with catchphrases and hobbyhorses to draw people to your blog is a big mistake, because blogging is a long term gig and rare is the person who can keep up that sort of sham, particularly in writing.
  • It's a buzzword, a catchphrase, and I simultaneously wince and stifle laughter whenever I hear it.
  • You have in-jokes and catchphrases and ‘remember when?’
  • By the same token, such attention traps reduce any accompanying blurbs to simplifying catchphrases, slogans of common sense.
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