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13 thoughts on “Cliche – Cliche Meaning – Cliche Examples – Special Language Forms
  1. That reminds me that Alfred Hitchcook in all his interviews explained that he took so much time putting the film down on paper because he was always avoiding the cliché.

  2. Our beloved alex, this word is onomatopoeic. It us related to another verb in enlish whic is click. So the etymological notion of this word is sth that is overly clicked ( used) , so it is worn out and threadbare

  3. Funny you should make this video! I decided to quit using cliches in my greeting greetings with a the teacher and classmates on last Thursday. I'm tired of answering in a cliched way on the answer when answering "How are you?", so I found a page with extraordinary greetings which I'm going to use for avoiding to avoid my cliches like "I'm ok" or "I'm fine and you?". So I used the first one of a chart and it sounds like "I'm armed and ready for the lesson". Some of them sound rude, for example, "I was fine until you asked" but I will use them anyway but in at the appropriate moments.

  4. Teachers aim to give to their students a set of clichéd words and collocations when starting to explore English as a language. Do you think it's the right technique to apply when teaching a new language? I mean at the early stage, of course. Thanks!

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