Word of the Day for Saturday 15th March 2014
Claptrap \ KLAP-trap \, noun;
1. Pretentious but insincere or empty language: His speeches seem erudite
but analysis reveals them to be mere claptrap.
2. Any artifice or expedient for winning applause or impressing the public.
Quotes:
What is she to sneer at a brave, enduring race of fellow-beings! Dress them in tawdry rags, locate them anywhere on the continent,
write out their history in sounding claptrap, and she would be stirred by
pathetic thrills.
John Trafford Clegg, David's Loom: a story of Rochdale's life in the early years of the nineteenth century, 1894
...it was on the whole an enormous piece of claptrap; the room, almost vacant when I entered, beganto fill.
-- Charotte Brontë, Villette, 1853
Origin:
Claptrap came to English in the 1720’s as a portmanteau of clap and trap.
Thanks to: www.dictionary.com
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