Manido in english
Manido
pronunciation: mənidoʊ part of speech: noun
pronunciation: mənidoʊ part of speech: noun
In gestures
manido, lo = worn, the.
Example: It thrives on ambiguity, irony, paradox, which bring the disparate and hitherto unconnected into relationship, revealing new shades of meaning, or refreshing the worn, the tired, the cliched.manido = rank ; hackneyed ; worn ; well-worn ; jaded ; overused [over-used] ; overworked ; stale ; timeworn ; trite ; clichéd ; dog-eared ; hoary .
Example: And what I'm trying to suggest is that there's something shameful about a profession that has allowed this kind of blatant and rank ethnocentrism, racism, chauvinism, the whole schmier, to persist this long.Example: It is the order of words that helps us to distinguish between 'office post' and 'post office' or, to quote the hackneyed example, 'blind Venetian' and 'Venetian blind'.Example: Mearns warns us, 'Recollection is treacherous; it is usually too broad or too narrow for another's use; and what is more serious, it is frequently undependable and worn and feeble'.Example: To use a well-worn example, the string (2) physiotherapy (6) nurses $h for (6) bibliographies obviously represents a different sense from the similar string (2) physiotherapy (6) bibliographies (6) nurses $h for.Example: He is notorious for poking fun at those who advance jaded, esoteric ideas about the importance of studying classical languages.Example: Sustainable agriculture has become a very over-used concept.Example: User-friendliness is a much overworked phrase which has been interpreted in different ways by software houses.Example: We librarians are already infiltrators into the stale round of our readers' domestic daily life.Example: This is in stark contrast to the warped logic and timeworn language to which Lebanon's rulers resorted in the wake of the tragedy.Example: At the risk of sounding trite and a bit naive, I'd like to remind this group that the ISBD was also called, not for the cataloger's benefit, but as an international tool of bibliographic description.Example: He reinforces the self-deprecating and cliched concept that in order to be a writer, 'one must cultivate incompetence at almost every other form of profitable work'.Example: My plants that until only recently were bursting with verdant vitality stretching up to the spring sunshine are now looking a bit dog eared and world weary as they begin to bake in the summer sun.Example: I know this is a rather hoary topic, but I am going to mention it again.more:
» composición musical manida = war horse .
Example: Why is it that so many musical masterpieces are patronized as war horses whereas no serious art critic would ever protest another visit to the Sistine Chapel?.» frase muy manida = hackneyed phrase .
Example: Use of hackneyed phrases shows a certain amount of laziness, an absence of creativity, and a general lack of awareness of how to communicate clearly.» idea muy manida = hackneyed idea .
Example: Instead of challenging gender stereotypes, the book's maligners say it digs deeper into the hackneyed idea that women are subservient to men.» manido, lo = worn, the [Expresión usualmente acompañada del artículo] .
Example: It thrives on ambiguity, irony, paradox, which bring the disparate and hitherto unconnected into relationship, revealing new shades of meaning, or refreshing the worn, the tired, the cliched.» palabra muy manida = hackneyed word .
Example: I know those are hackneyed words, especially when used to describe yet another brilliant singer.