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Definitions

meretricious

[mer-i-trish-uhs] / ˌmɛr ɪˈtrɪʃ əs /


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.

“Shakespeare in Love” kidnapped its subject to force him into a flimsy and meretricious romcom; “Hamnet” reduces the concept of tragedy to actors being extremely sad.

From The Wall Street Journal • Nov. 27, 2025

The production can’t hide the show’s meretricious heart, but like the song that Scherzinger endows with Puccini-esque splendor, Lloyd has discovered “new ways to dream” Webber’s musical.

From Los Angeles Times • Nov. 12, 2024

The economic crash of 1929 descended on America like an ice age, ending a meretricious prosperity.

From Salon • Nov. 4, 2023

How can he revise this meretricious manuscript, “this three-hundred-page crime against truth,” without betraying his mother’s childhood friend?

From Washington Post • Jul. 6, 2021

The invention of the sewing machine was the signal for the appearance of frills and furbelows, and meretricious ornament of every kind.

From The Evolution of Fashion by Gardiner, Florence Mary




Vocabulary lists containing meretricious