ghīsā-pīṭā English Meaning - Translate ghīsā-pīṭā (Trite) into English from Hindi

ghīsā-pīṭā Roman Hindi to English Meaning is Trite. It is a adjective, triter, tritest by form. Other ghīsā-pīṭā English Meanings are are Banal, Bathetic, Bilk, Bromidic, Chain, Common, Corny, Drained, Dull, Exhausted, Flat, Hackneyed, Hokey, Jejune, Musty, Ordinary, Pedestrian, Platitudinous, Routine, Set, Stale, Stereotyped, Stock, Threadbare, Tired, Uninspired, Unoriginal, Vapid, Worn, Timeworn, Old Hat, Prosaic, Shopworn, Cliché, and a lot others listed on this page.

ghīsā-pīṭā

घिसा-पिटा

Trite

[trahyt]

Definitions of Trite

adj. Worn out; common; used until so common as to have lost novelty and interest; hackneyed; stale

Form Adjective, Triter, Tritest.

How To Spell Trite [trahyt]

Origin of Trite Mid 16th century: from Latin tritus, past participle of terere ‘to rub’.

ghīsā-pīṭā Roman Hindi to English Meaning - Find the correct meaning of ghīsā-pīṭā in English. It is important to understand the word properly when we translate it from Roman Hindi to English. There are always several meanings of each word in English. The correct meaning of ghīsā-pīṭā in English is Trite. In Hindi, it is written as घिसा-पिटा. Trite is a adjective, triter, tritest according to parts of speech. It is spelled as [trahyt].

There are also several similar words to Trite in our dictionary, which are Banal, Bathetic, Bilk, Bromidic, Chain, Common, Corny, Drained, Dull, Exhausted, Flat, Hackneyed, Hokey, Jejune, Musty, Ordinary, Pedestrian, Platitudinous, Routine, Set, Stale, Stereotyped, Stock, Threadbare, Tired, Uninspired, Unoriginal, Vapid, Worn, Timeworn, Old Hat, Prosaic, Shopworn and Cliché. The opposite word of Trite are Desirable, Fresh, Important, Impressive, New, Original, Pertinent, Relevant and Uncommon. After Roman Hindi to English translation of ghīsā-pīṭā, if you have issues in pronunciation, then you can hear the audio of it in the online dictionary.

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