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  1. These are known as empty words, expressions that may sound profound or impactful but ultimately carry little to no real significance. Empty words are commonly used in various contexts such as speeches, advertisements, or conversations to create the illusion of depth or importance.

  2. empty words. This page is about the collocation empty words. collocation pattern: adjective + noun. Meaning. words that aren't really meant, or that won't lead to action. For example. He said he'd never use drugs again, but they were just more empty words. We want real action from the government, not more empty words and broken promises. Note:

    • Examples and Observations of The First Definition
    • Full (Content) Words and Empty (form) Words
    • Expletive Constructions: Stylistic Advice
    • Examples and Observations of Definition #2
    • "Expletive deleted"
    • Infixes

    "Rather than providing a grammatical or structural meaning as the other structure-word classes do, the expletives—sometimes defined as 'empty words'—generally act simply as operators that allow us...

    "It is now generally accepted that the absolute terms (full words and empty words) and the rigid division of the dichotomy are misleading: on the one hand, there is no agreed way of quantifying the...
    "I don't believe them, Buttercup thought. There are no sharks in the water and there is no blood in his cup." (William Goldman, The Princess Bride, 1973)
    "When you're not here to look at me I have to laugh at your absurd powers." (Rosellen Brown, "How to Win." The Massachusetts Review, 1975)
    "It's a pity that Kattie couldn't be here tonight." (Penelope Fitzgerald, The Bookshop. Gerald Duckworth, 1978)

    "[A] device for emphasizing a particular word (whether the normal complement or the normal subject) is the so-called expletive construction, in which we begin the sentence with 'It is' or 'There is...

    "Oh, my goodness! Oh, my gracious! Oh, my golly! What a narrow escape! What a near miss! What good fortune for our friends!" (Roald Dahl, Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator, 1972)
    "Holy mackerel. You're Aaron Maguire's son? Good grief. Good heavens. Your family's practically a dynasty in South Bend. Everybody knows they're wallowing in money." (Jennifer Greene, Blame It on P...
    "His arms give way and he crumples onto the grass, shrieking and laughing and rolling down the hill. But he lands on a stiff little thorn branch.Shit bugger bloody, shit bugger bloody." (Mark Haddo...

    "(1) Originally, an expression used to fill out a line of verse or a sentence, without adding anything to the sense. (2) An interjected word, especially an oath or a swearword. At the time of the W...

    "The places where expletives may be inserted, as a matter of emphasis, are closely related to (but not necessarily identical to) the places where a speaker may pause. Expletives are normally positi...

  3. empty words. noun. These are words and phrases related to empty words. Click on any word or phrase to go to its thesaurus page. TALK. Synonyms. empty speech. hot air. blarney. verbiage. bunkum. prattle. chatter. twaddle. blatherskite. gab. talk. gossip. rumor. hearsay. noise. report. word. tittle-tattle. Slang. scuttlebutt. Slang. watercooler talk.

  4. One of the most widespread examples of this is empty phrases. At best, these phrases add words to a sentence without adding meaning. At worst, they distract from and undermine the topic of a sentence. Empty Phrases in a Nutshell. At their core, empty phrases are the same as saying, “the topic that I’m going to write about is…”

  5. use empty words to hide the threat –, a silhouette • select powerful verbs – crept, grabbed, smothered wondered if she darkness. • use dramatic connectives – in an instant, without warning, out of the blue three and drop in clauses. • hide the threat; use an abandoned setting or lull the reader with a cosy setting

  6. Hace 2 días · Definitions of. empty words. noun. loud and confused and empty talk. synonyms: empty talk, hot air, palaver, rhetoric. see more.