It's the Word of the Day podcast for January 15th.
Today's word is hackneed spelled H-A-C-K-N-E-Y-E-D.
Hackneed is an adjective.
Something is considered hackneed when it's not interesting or funny because of being used too often.
In other words, it's neither fresh nor original.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Vulture by Tim Greerson.
Any positive lesson here is lost in all the hackneyed jokes,
and by the end, the movie falls apart entirely.
In his 1926 tome, a dictionary of modern English usage, lexicographer H.W.
Fowler, offers a good deal of advice under the heading, Hackneyed Phrases.
While some of the phrases he cautions against, such as, too funny for words or my better half,
will be familiar to most readers today, others, such as the Latin,
Hink, Eli, Lacramai, have mostly fallen into obscurity.
Fowler was not the first usage writer to warn against the overuse of hack need,
that is, trite or cliched phrases.
A number of authors in the late 19th and early 20th century had similarly taken up against trite and banal terms of phrase.
In 1897, for example,
Frederick Lawrence Knowles advised against using agitate the tintin ambulatory,
and in 1917, Margaret Ashman and Gerhard Lohmer discouraged the dreamy mazes of the waltz.
Were these hackneyed phrases so objected to that they became obsolete?