Bromide in a sentence as a noun

Fake internet points seem to have a bromide effect on the psyche.

It is a takeoff on the "No one ever got fired for choosing IBM" bromide.

I can't count how many companies I've seen post jobs in the past month that use this bromide.

Our organism is way too complex for this bromide to have any merit.

It's about time someone decided to debunk this awful bromide.

Regarding "Attracting Luck": it sounds like a value-free bromide, but it really does work.

"Indeed, which is why I dislike the "puck" bromide, regardless of who popularized it.

Reminded me of Max Gergel's "Excuse me sir, would you like to buy a kilo of isopropyl bromide?

Once in my second year chemistry lab, we were doing a final lab exam and there was this stuff in a brown flask labelled bromide.

To confuse the basic concept with a sort of bromide for the blind egos of a privileged elite is a terrible mistake.

The never-say-die bromide of startup cofounders the world over is mostly ********.

Bromine, bromide and brominated organic compounds are all completely different chemicals.

"The first example which jumps to mind: "Sitewide navigation should be consistent" is a common UX bromide and is provably suboptimal with regards to conversions of interest, including signup to SaaS trials and success with checkout at e-commerce sites.

A 'bromide' is the verbal equivalent of patent medicine, a meaningless nostrum or 'thought-terminating clich' in the modern vernacular; I think you meant 'broadside', which is literally a ship of war firing her entire main battery at once, or metaphorically a full-throated and fiery verbal attack.

Bromide definitions

noun

any of the salts of hydrobromic acid; formerly used as a sedative but now generally replaced by safer drugs

noun

a trite or obvious remark

See also: platitude cliche banality commonplace