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Pablum

[pab-luhm]

Trademark.
  1. a brand of soft, bland cereal for infants.



noun

  1. (lowercase),  trite, naive, or simplistic ideas or writings; intellectual pap.

Pablum

/ ˈpɑːbləm /

noun

  1. a cereal food for infants, developed in Canada

“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

“Porridge? Mushy peas? Pablum? Oh, let me guess, it’s tapioca isn’t it? Is it tapioca? Or are we calling it rice pudding tonight?”

The former CIA analyst recalled a House hearing on intelligence which featured some 10 bureaucrats he described as a ” mob of intelligence officials spouting the same watered-down Pablum.”

I smelt a mingling of Pablum and sour milk and salt-cod-stinky diapers and felt sorrowful and tender.

Did they appreciate how a country girl mastered the Pablum pop idiom of the early 1950s and set it gently aflame?

From Time

Pablum tarted up with tennis racquets, “16-Love” is, in a sense, the perfect movie for teenagers: you can text and tweet to your heart’s content and never miss a thing.

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When To Use

What does pablum mean?

Pablum is a noun referring to ideas, speech, writing, or other media that are bland or simplistic or that lack any real intellectual substance or value.The term pablum comes directly from the brand name Pablum, which manufactured a children’s cereal known for being bland and easily digestible.Example: Celebrity news is the sort of pablum that distracts people from the actual issues happening in our world.

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Picasso, PabloPabst