Hackneyed means old, tired, and worn out. Here are some sentences.
Do not use that hackneyed expression in your speech tonight.Tattoos may give people, in that hackneyed contemporary phrase, "a sense of identity."The politicians' use of "change for tomorrow" is a hackneyed expression.
Robert worked hard on his proposal so the board would see his plan as new and fresh, not hackneyed, like the plan presented by James. The word hackneyed is an adjective.
Every time my internet goes down, the cable company gives me a hackneyed explanation.
(The adjective hackneyed means used too often, or cliche.)Each time he reported his street light outage, he was given the same hackneyed excuse about a shortage in manpower.The political campaign featured the same hackneyed examples of patriotic rhetoric.The problem with expressions is that they become so hackneyed, we're surprised when they come true.The teacher complained about the hackneyed use of the word nice.The problem with expressions is that they become so hackneyed, that we're surprised when they come true.
Cliché means hackneyed and stereotypically exaggerated, as in "The image of a schoolteacher as a quiet spinster is cliché ."
fresh
the root word is hack
tritest
Opposites of hackneyed are new, fresh, original...
Gor does not exist in french its other word for what
Hackneyed - 2013 was released on: USA: 1 April 2013
γρήγοροs (GREE-gor-ohs)