Definition of "platitude"
platitude
noun
countable and uncountable, plural platitudes
(countable) An often-quoted saying that is supposed to be meaningful but has become unoriginal or hackneyed through overuse.
Quotations
Semiramis was the first woman to invent eunuchs and women have had sympathy for them ever since; […] and women can tell them what they can't tell other men. And Ivor, suddenly cheered by laughing at his absurd platitudes, and finding himself by the door, was going from the room.
1922, Michael Arlen, “2/1/2”, in “Piracy”: A Romantic Chronicle of These Days
For most of the past three decades, the natural world was treated almost as an afterthought by world leaders. If discussed at all, it was with platitudes about the need to save polar bears and tigers.
2019 August 30, Jonathan Watts, “Amazon fires show world heading for point of no return, says UN”, in The Guardian
(countable) A claim that is trivially true, to the point of being uninteresting.
Quotations
The synthesis which he helped to effect was so successful that this aspect of his work escaped notice in the last century: all that Britomart stands for was platitude to our fathers. It is platitude no longer.
1963, James R. Kreuzer, Lee Cogan, Modern Writings on Major English Authors, Ardent Media, page 109
After explaining myself sufficiently, I now offer my own platitude: I believe that the institution of the cabaret has the right to exist only so long as it bears the character of dilettantism and improvisation.
1993, Harold B. Segel, The Vienna Coffeehouse Wits, 1890-1938, Purdue University Press, page 210
Indeed, in the ownership scenario the idealization is supported in a much thinner manner: we start with a platitude that characterizes individuals as coowners (that they are de facto seen as either property holders themselves or otherwise as […]
2012 September 16, Mathias Risse, On Global Justice, Princeton University Press, page 149
(uncountable) Flatness; lack of change, activity, or deviation.
Quotations
Though we do not have a traditional correspondence theory, which sets up a structural similarity relation between statements and facts, we have the truth of sentences determined by word-to-world relations, in particular, relations between linguistic items and objects. This reflects the platitude behind correspondence, but the Tarskian appartatus gives the platitude more substance.
2013, Ernest Lepore, Kirk Ludwig, A Companion to Donald Davidson
(uncountable) Unoriginality; triteness.
Quotations
Of the true steady-going German nature the bane is, as I remarked, flat commonness; there seems no end to its capacity for platitude; it has neither the quick perception of the Celt to save it from platitude, nor the strenuousness of the Norman;
2001, Daniel R. Davis, Matthew Arnold, On the study of celtic literature, page 127
More damning, this 'flat-pack kit' causes us to decline into platitude and predictability, denies us from real political intellectual purchase and, as result, standard theoretical ideas become our ideological comforters.
2014, Hester du Plessis, Jeffrey Sehume, Leonard Martin, Concept and Application of Transdisciplinarity in Intellectual Discourse and Research, page 29