speak simply
open EX,''You should never leave the door open''.
No. An idiom is a phrase whose meaning cannot be determined by context. A cliche is a stale quotation or phrase that has been overused.Example idiom: He was feeling under the weatheryesterday, but today he's fine.Example cliche: Think outside of the box.
The cliche for not good with one's hands is "all thumbs". Example sentence: She tried to show me how to knit, but with the needles and yarn, I was all thumbs.
That would be cliché or cliche. klee-SHAY.
The spelling is cliche (French accented form cliché), meaning trite, outmoded, or stereotyped.
A cliche is a phrase or opinion that is overused and can betray a lack of original thought. For example, using the term Abandon Ship. Many use this phrase outside its original meaning. Its original form was a command to leave a ship which was sinking or in a state of destress which could effect human life. Now however, the phrase is used in any situation to mean people leaving a situation or event. An instance of this would be a number of people leaving their jobs because the company is in trouble or even to leave a party which is dead or boring and people would say "no fun here, I'm going to abandon ship" meaning they are leaving the party.
the opposite of non sequitur can be: cliche (if used for humorous purposes, since non sequitur is completely irrelevant, but a cliche means common and overused) or apropo or apt (meaning it is very relevant)
CLICHE. not clesha.. a cliche is a word or phrase that has been used so much, it has lost its meaning. examples are: LOL, OMG.. (and etc., most text words are worthless now..) got it??
The plural of cliche is cliches.
Door on the Left as You Leave the Elevator was created in 1988.
Lucien Cliche was born in 1916.
Lucien Cliche died in 2005.