We have no meanings for "become a cliche" in our records yet.
1 It has become a cliche to say José Mourinho has run out of new ideas.
2 It has become a cliche but nonetheless true, to describe Northern Ireland as a deeply dysfunctional society.
3 It has become a cliche to say that politicians are mirrors of society, but it is true.
4 In an interview with David Norris we agreed that the lone piper had become a cliche at funerals.
5 It has become a cliche of political reward, even though many of our formidable leaders opt for different brands.
6 It's also become a cliche to say that while the Celtic Tiger purrs for some, it whimpers for others.
7 It could, had the words not become a cliche for another kind of horror, have been called The Dying Rooms.
8 It has become a cliche to say that the personal is political, but for Kahlo, and for her art, this was always true.
9 It has become a cliche to say that Ed Miliband needs to start filling out his notorious "blank sheet of paper".
10 Sometimes a phrase becomes a cliche because it is true.
11 I know I'm hearing what I've always believed to be the death-knell for someone of my profession: I'm becoming a cliche .
12 His offbeat, friendly humor became a cliche for the next generation of magicians, who copied his patter for their own performances.
13 It is a kind of realist hallucination, although I should say the starling murmuration sequence is now in danger of becoming a cliche .
14 The mushroom theory of hurling development in Cork became a cliche so long ago that its ironic referencing has by this stage become equally cliched.
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