malarkey

[ US /məˈɫɑɹki/ ]
[ UK /mˈælɑːki/ ]
NOUN
  1. empty rhetoric or insincere or exaggerated talk
    don't give me any of that jazz
    that's a lot of wind
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How To Use malarkey In A Sentence

  • This was the real deal too - none of your tourist queso malarkey, just a bunch of locals sitting around, strumming and drumming and clapping and singing.
  • And I can't really argue with Adam Quigley when he says it replicated the feelings of childhood, because that's subjective, but to say it captures the spirit of the book is just plain malarkey. This Week in DVD & Blu-ray: 2012, Where the Wild Things Are, Ponyo, and More | /Film
  • There's certainly much more to this ice-sculpting malarkey than you'd think…
  • I guess the same people who follow your malarkey are the ones who go to church recruiting events for the military.
  • Not surprisingly, given our growing national devotion to mystical malarkey, Irish people are flocking to this supernatural health centre.
  • Now amongst other things, I'm a student of natural history and a little bit sceptical about all this Global Warming malarkey.
  • The claim that Thomas Jefferson was a cockfighter is just malarkey! Waldo Jaquith - Cockfighters come out of the woodwork.
  • This decorating malarkey don't half take it out of you.
  • The elderly gentleman from Morningside was having trouble getting his kip, what with all that festival malarkey going on.
  • Here are five reasons for calling malarkey on all this pessimism: Carla Wise: Climate Change Action a Casualty of the Economic Crisis? Not So Fast.
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