triviality

IPA: trɪviˈæɫʌti

noun

  • The quality of being trivial or unimportant.
  • Something which is trivial or unimportant.
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Examples of "triviality" in Sentences

  • You like solving the kind of triviality that leads nowhere.
  • The youth are going out today against troubles, triviality and political parties.
  • There is so much more to this book and readers shouldn't be scared away by the triviality.
  • I believe that Mr. Brady's experimentation with financial Ludditism was a venture in triviality.
  • The only way you can lift the remaining £1,000 of your Equitable Life fund is if you can meet the rules relating to what is known as 'triviality'.
  • Going to the particular case of the fine structure constant, allow me to recall a triviality: that it also depends of the point where the electroweak symmetry breaks.
  • It is his short stories, rather than the 'triviality of biography', that provide the best clues to the secret life of this intensely private writer, argues Janet Malcolm
  • AIf you are between the ages of 60 and 75, and the combined value of all your pension funds is less than £18,000 for 2010/11, you can take your pension funds as a lump sum under the "triviality" rule.
  • Bitch about The Washington Post's "triviality" all you want, but the story will hurt Edwards, and, really, as self-respecting bloggers looking for readers, why do you all want to keep repeating the same thing?
  • _Speaker_ were a mere party rag like "Judy" or "The Times," it would be only remarkable for moderation, but to us who have built hopes on it as the pioneer of a younger and larger political spirit it is difficult to be silent when we find it, as it seems to us, poisoned with that spirit of ferocious triviality which is the spirit of

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synonyms for trivialitydescribing words for triviality
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