释义 |
Definition of banal in English: banaladjective bəˈnalbəˈnɑːl So lacking in originality as to be obvious and boring. 毫无新意的,乏味的 songs with banal, repeated words 歌词乏味又多重复的歌曲。 Example sentencesExamples - The real opposite of the sublime is, of course, the intransigently banal and commonsensical.
- The banal and obvious truth is that life and a country are largely what you make of them.
- The outcome of this populist turn is the celebration of the ordinary and the banal.
- The play pokes fun at these dialogues through characters having banal conversations.
- The album avoids being banal and predictable because he is not afraid to fully use his voice to emote.
- Her comments are so threadbare and banal, that her role smacks of the worst kind of tokenism.
- So expertly dissected that it's like all great satire - banal in its accuracy and attention to detail.
- While some of the book's guidelines are common sense, others are banal.
- What followed was flagrant musical bankruptcy and the insufferable drone of banal music.
- She loathes Hollywood, finds it distasteful and banal, hates the idea of her art being tainted by commerce.
- Ray's comments swerved from the banal, to the solid and sober, like all good reporters.
- A song which can appeal to non-native speakers is obviously going to have relatively banal lyrics.
- As long as domesticated TV reigns supreme, our fascination with the banal will surely continue.
- This outcome has become a banal tautology repeated in every pharmaceutical marketing article.
- It doesn't really say anything new and tells its story in the most banal and predictable manner possible.
- I find most New Age spiritual music to be boring and banal but I've met a lot of people that find great use for it.
- I suspect that he thinks he is one, which is why we are occasionally treated to comments that to most people appear banal.
- I made a long list of quite banal and boring questions that I went through and asked this man.
- No one can get excited about the most boring and banal of road stops like this guy.
- People are always trotting out banal statistics and clichés to placate those who appear to be in a spot of bother.
Synonyms trite, hackneyed, clichéd, platitudinous, vapid, commonplace, ordinary, common, stock, conventional, stereotyped, predictable, overused, overdone, overworked, stale, worn out, time-worn, tired, threadbare, hoary, hack, unimaginative, unoriginal, derivative, uninspired, prosaic, dull, boring, pedestrian, run-of-the-mill, routine, humdrum informal old hat, corny, played out, hacky North American informal cornball, dime-store rare truistic, bromidic
Derivativesadverb Number 3 seems banally sensible, until you read Howard's closing statement. Example sentencesExamples - Say what you want about her often banally produced records; live, Jewel's a gem of a solo performer who's both self-aware and truly, outrageously funny.
- Children may be the future, as the authors banally point out, but adults are the people who decide the direction.
- (All banally true, but in the context of the programme, it was a sudden outbreak of sensitivity).
- And often it's an entirely banally insignificant spot.
OriginMid 18th century (originally relating to feudal service in the sense 'compulsory', hence 'common to all'): from French, from ban 'a proclamation or call to arms'; ultimately of Germanic origin and related to ban1. RhymesAmal, Arles, Barisal, Basle, Bhopal, Carl, chorale, corral, dhal, entente cordiale, Escorial, farl, femme fatale, Funchal, gayal, gnarl, halal, Karl, kraal, locale, marl, morale, musicale, Pascal, pastorale, procès-verbal, Provençal, rationale, real, rial, riyal, snarl, Taal, Taj Mahal, timbale, toile, Vaal, Vidal, Waal Definition of banal in US English: banaladjective So lacking in originality as to be obvious and boring. 毫无新意的,乏味的 songs with banal, repeated words 歌词乏味又多重复的歌曲。 Example sentencesExamples - I find most New Age spiritual music to be boring and banal but I've met a lot of people that find great use for it.
- Ray's comments swerved from the banal, to the solid and sober, like all good reporters.
- The play pokes fun at these dialogues through characters having banal conversations.
- A song which can appeal to non-native speakers is obviously going to have relatively banal lyrics.
- The real opposite of the sublime is, of course, the intransigently banal and commonsensical.
- I suspect that he thinks he is one, which is why we are occasionally treated to comments that to most people appear banal.
- It doesn't really say anything new and tells its story in the most banal and predictable manner possible.
- This outcome has become a banal tautology repeated in every pharmaceutical marketing article.
- What followed was flagrant musical bankruptcy and the insufferable drone of banal music.
- So expertly dissected that it's like all great satire - banal in its accuracy and attention to detail.
- Her comments are so threadbare and banal, that her role smacks of the worst kind of tokenism.
- People are always trotting out banal statistics and clichés to placate those who appear to be in a spot of bother.
- The outcome of this populist turn is the celebration of the ordinary and the banal.
- While some of the book's guidelines are common sense, others are banal.
- The album avoids being banal and predictable because he is not afraid to fully use his voice to emote.
- She loathes Hollywood, finds it distasteful and banal, hates the idea of her art being tainted by commerce.
- No one can get excited about the most boring and banal of road stops like this guy.
- I made a long list of quite banal and boring questions that I went through and asked this man.
- The banal and obvious truth is that life and a country are largely what you make of them.
- As long as domesticated TV reigns supreme, our fascination with the banal will surely continue.
Synonyms trite, hackneyed, clichéd, platitudinous, vapid, commonplace, ordinary, common, stock, conventional, stereotyped, predictable, overused, overdone, overworked, stale, worn out, time-worn, tired, threadbare, hoary, hack, unimaginative, unoriginal, derivative, uninspired, prosaic, dull, boring, pedestrian, run-of-the-mill, routine, humdrum
OriginMid 18th century (originally relating to feudal service in the sense ‘compulsory’, hence ‘common to all’): from French, from ban ‘a proclamation or call to arms’; ultimately of Germanic origin and related to ban. |