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glittering generality

American  
[glit-er-ing jen-uh-ral-i-tee] / ˈglɪt ər ɪŋ ˌdʒɛn əˈræl ɪ ti /

noun

  1. a word or phrase that is used primarily to appeal to a person's emotions and values.

    They used glittering generalities like “freedom,” “civilization,” and “democracy” to boost support for the movement without talking about how to achieve those lofty goals.


Etymology

Origin of glittering generality

First recorded in 1845–50

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Feeling small, at best, is a kind of glittering generality.

From The Voice of the Machines An Introduction to the Twentieth Century by Lee, Gerald Stanley

To interrogate a glittering generality is to slur its projector; she wished her hearers to be dazzled, not moved to the impertinence of cross-examination.

From The Second Generation by Phillips, David Graham

It looked to no glittering generality for its reward, such as the soul s 'highest good much talked of in the philosophy of that time.

From Eben Holden, a tale of the north country by Bacheller, Irving

In its center was a battered, weather kiosk, and facing it, was a huge electric advertisement which indulged in the glittering generality, that "You get what you pay for."

From Calvary Alley by Rice, Alice Caldwell Hegan

You might as well think of loving a glittering generality like "the American woman."

From Little Rivers; a book of essays in profitable idleness by Van Dyke, Henry

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