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cheesy

[ US /ˈtʃizi/ ]
[ UK /t‍ʃˈiːsi/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of very poor quality; flimsy

How To Use cheesy In A Sentence

  • Normally, when we refer to the term "bricked", we mean it in a negative way, but Dutch maker Guus Oosterbaan managed to turn this negative into a positive by using a cheesy off-the-shelf Pong console after gutting it to wrap it all up in some duct tape, followed by embedding it within a concrete block. Ubergizmo
  • She gave a cheesy grin to the cameras.
  • And when I see how many people are being sucked into gold investments from all those cheesy radio and TV ads (with their overt or sometimes explicit survivalist overtones), I see another bubble being blown that at some sad point will go blooey. Fox Business News, Where Green Arrows Turn Brown Eyes Blue: James Wolcott
  • They both nod with these ridiculously cheesy smiles.
  • There were about 35 of us there, lots of friendly people, some gorgeous food, plentiful vino and lots of cheesy dancing!
  • A poor script with bad dialogue and a cheesy, contrived family crisis doesn't help her much.
  • If you can overlook the corny moments and cheesy dialogue, then this has atmosphere and energy to spare.
  • This is cheesy, containing every cliche that we can imagine from 1970s Country.
  • By releasing Tectonics, Freeland showed the world that UK breakbeat meant much more than the cheesy sounds of Fatboy Slim, Chemical Brothers and the completely horrible Bentley Rhythm Ace.
  • That sounds really cheesy and corny, but it's the truth.
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