truism
/ˈtruːɪzəm/ (bre, ipa) · [trˈuɪzəm] /ˈtruːɪzəm/ (ame, ipa) · [trˈuɪzəm] /ˈtrü-ˌi-zəm How to pronounce truism (audio)/ (ame, mw)
truism — noun
- truismsingular
- truismsplural
1. a remark whose truth is already plain to everyone, so saying it adds little or n
a remark whose truth is already plain to everyone, so saying it adds little or no real value.
During the meeting, Élise called 'water is wet' a truism, not a plan.
call a remark a truism in discussion
After the storm, Adisa laughed when the mayor offered the truism 'safety comes first.'
offer the truism + quoted advice
To Defne, the poster's message about kindness sounded like an empty truism.
What Vivek wanted was repair money, not another truism about patience.
In court, the judge dismissed the slogan as a truism hiding a hard choice.
- platitude
often sounds more moralizing or dull, not simply obvious
- cliché
usually stresses overused wording rather than plain truth
- commonplace
more formal and often used for a familiar observation
文法句型
a truism that + clause
dismiss something as a truism
reduce something to a truism
用法筆記
Often follows verbs such as state, repeat, dismiss, and reduce something to. Writers usually choose it when a statement is correct but too obvious to help with a real problem.