platitudinous
Platitudinous is an adjective used to describe language that is saturated with platitudes—overly familiar, insipid, or hackneyed statements that express general truths without addressing specifics. Such language tends to feel conventional, unoriginal, and emotionally pallid.
The word derives from platitude (from French platitude, from plat “flat”), with the suffix -ous forming the
Platitudinous language appears in writing, speech, journalism, and public relations. It is often criticized for substituting
A platitude is a banal or obvious statement; platitudinous describes the quality of language that consists