truism

[troo-iz-uh m] /ˈtru ɪz əm/
noun
1.
a self-evident, obvious truth.
Origin
1700-10; true + -ism
Related forms
truistic, truistical, adjective
Can be confused
truism, truth (see confusables note at the current entry)
Synonyms
cliché, platitude.
Confusables note
Contrary to what some people believe, the word truism is not a more elegant word for truth. While the word truth can occasionally be used to refer to a “truism,” since truisms are often true, the reverse—the use of truism to mean “truth”—is unwise. Truism stands for a certain kind of truth—a cliché, a platitude, something so self-evident that it is hardly worth mentioning. One can use it to accuse another writer or speaker of saying something so obvious or evident and trite that pointing it out is pointless. To say that a statement is a truism when you intend to compliment it as truthful, factual, even provable, will merely serve to confuse those who know that calling something a truism is not praise, but a criticism or insult.
Note, however, that truism is used in a technical sense in mathematics or philosophy for restating something that is already known from its terms or premises. Examples of such truisms include: “Men are not women” and “Since the circumference of a circle equals twice the radius multiplied by π (2πr), it equals the diameter multiplied by π (πd).”
Examples from the web for truism
  • It is a truism that fiction is often truer than truth.
  • It is a truism that the stock market is a pendulum swinging between fear and greed.
  • The green movement takes as a truism that ecosystems are healthier when they contain many species of plants.
  • It is a truism that the average investor cannot beat the market after costs.
  • It may be a truism but it's still worth trumpeting-when it starts to rain, good photographers head out to make pictures.
  • The headline could mean the truism that the brain is used by primates in touching and moving objects.
  • There's the truism about a weed's being a flower where you don't want it, or whatever.
  • But it's also a truism that the end of the road usually turns out to be a disappointment.
  • However, it's a truism in technological development that no silver lining comes without its cloud.
  • For years, it was a medical truism that the earlier cancer could be detected, the better.
British Dictionary definitions for truism

truism

/ˈtruːɪzəm/
noun
1.
an obvious truth; platitude
Derived Forms
truistic, adjective
Word Origin
C18: from true + -ism
Word Origin and History for truism
n.

1708, from true + -ism; first attested in Swift.