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household word
noun
a familiar name, phrase, saying, etc.; byword.
The advertising campaign is designed to make this new product a household word.
Word History and Origins
Origin of household word1
Example Sentences
To inflict these delusional internet memes and outright fabrications on the elected leader of the nation that made “apartheid” a household word goes light-years beyond historical irony — it’s like an Upright Citizens Brigade comedy sketch that was rejected as overly cynical.
They began spot-spraying with a pesticide called malathion, which was about to become a household word.
Dan Fisher in 1988 was one of the first to make “intifada” a household word in America and the English-speaking world.
“To keep every employee busy, to pay them and to turn a profit, Jay Hormel believed a stellar product was needed that would become a household word,” according to a Hormel history book released in 1991 to commemorate the company’s centennial.
Education funding rates for incarcerated students were set in 1995, when Microsoft was barely a household word.
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