- shovel-ready
- transparent/transparency
- czar
- tweet
- app
- sexting
- friend as a verb ("friending," "unfriending," etc.)
- teachable moment
- in these economic times...
- stimulus
- toxic assets
- too big to fail
- bromance
- chillaxin'
- Obama-prefix or roots (i.e., Obamanomics)
Cliches are rather interesting though. I think they say something about the mass appeal, durability, and utility that a certain phrase or word has. And there's a fair chance that if you saw a stranger's list of cliches, you would be surprised by some of it. Nonetheless, cliches don't belong in polished writing. But recognizing them is tricky. The magazine's editor might be bugged by something that seems innocuous enough to me and vice-versa. If the both of us agree that the phrasing is tired, then we will probably strike it from the copy. If, following a discussion, only one of us is bothered by it, the phrasing is left intact.
3 comments:
Thanks for this, Shayna. Reminds me of the "took to the hills" phrase we were dealing with in the Scott Nearing paragraph.
I'm glad you wrote about cliches, Shayna, because I find them problematic, too. I am always interested to read everyone's favorites, so I enjoyed John E McIntyre's seasonal list at The Baltimore Sun.
Hah! I liked that holiday list! Sometimes it's difficult for me to consciously recognize that something is cliche until I've seen them listed and pointed out in such a fashion. My "favorite" cliches tend to be in regard to book reviews, which use "tour de force" ad nauseum :)
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