"I am exactly what is says in the tin."
The use of an eagle in a logo is so cliche.
"crying during a sad movie is so cliche"---INCORRECT USAGE This is a common error. Cliché is a noun: "That phrase is such a cliché." Clichéd is the adjective formed from it. "Use of that phrase is so clichéd."
An apple a day keeps the doctor away is an old cliche
Time heals all wounds is a cliche.
Tropes are figures of speech or the use of figurative language. Recently, however, tropes have taken on the meaning of "cliche". Thus, the word "tropes" has been used in two sentences.
The use of an eagle in a logo is so cliche.
No. It could be a response to a question or part of a sentence.
Asking for sentences on WikiAnswers is so cliche
When he is speaking, almost every word is a cliche.
"crying during a sad movie is so cliche"---INCORRECT USAGE This is a common error. Cliché is a noun: "That phrase is such a cliché." Clichéd is the adjective formed from it. "Use of that phrase is so clichéd."
The cliche is "fair and square."
The ending of the book was just one huge, overused cliché.The editor did not like the cliché in the author's book and suggested that it is changed.
An apple a day keeps the doctor away is an old cliche
Time heals all wounds is a cliche.
No, "you are in debt to your ears" is not a recognized cliche or idiom in English. The phrase likely conveys the idea of being overwhelmed or deeply involved in something, but it does not have widespread usage or recognition.
A cliché is an overused phrase or it can be a stereotype. Both sides in the debate used cliché arguments that were weak.
No because "as cold as a boot" would be a simile - and it makes no sense anyway, because nobody thinks of a boot as something cold.A cliche would be "as cold as ice" maybe - but that's still a simile.