What's the difference between threadbare and vapid?

Threadbare


Definition:

  • (a.) Worn to the naked thread; having the nap worn off; threadbare clothes.
  • (a.) Fig.: Worn out; as, a threadbare subject; stale topics and threadbare quotations.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) He said the nuclear non-proliferation treaty, due for renewal next year, was "threadbare" and that the existing nuclear powers would be in a much better position to tell non-nuclear countries not to develop weapons if they pursued deep cuts in their stockpiles.
  • (2) However, Australia are a threadbare side with absolutely nothing about them.
  • (3) Substitute Felipe Pardo scores twice as Olympiakos beat Dinamo Zagreb Read more Wenger’s options on the bench looked threadbare; Bayern’s rather less so and Pep Guardiola was able to introduce Robben in the 54th minute.
  • (4) The 57-year-old, working with a threadbare squad which contained just eight players and no senior goalkeeper when the pre-season friendlies started , has publicly questioned the club’s transfer policy on a number of occasions.
  • (5) Why keep daytime TV churning through the wastes of the day on both BBC1 and BBC2 when one channel could do the threadbare run of Angela Lansbury series and jumble-sale reality without anyone missing or caring?
  • (6) It is the point where the already threadbare veil of "meritocracy" falls off to reveal a fiscal system designed to reward already concentrated pots of wealth.
  • (7) With Tom Huddlestone, Jermaine Jenas, David Bentley and Danny Rose all unfit too, Tottenham's midfield has a threadbare look.
  • (8) But the reaction leaves BOJ governor Haruhiko Kuroda’s assertion that his policy is having its intended effects looking increasingly threadbare.
  • (9) Most of it is pretty threadbare, especially since photos exist of Boris and Zac with some of the same people.
  • (10) Pellegrini had criticised Uefa for allowing the match to go ahead on a threadbare pitch that he described as "unbelievable".
  • (11) 2007: It snapped up Coley Pharmaceutical of the US for a relatively modest $164m in order to boost Pfizer's threadbare pipeline of new drugs.
  • (12) [A few months ago, I signed a letter with Monbiot and others to British Prime Minister David Cameron, arguing that environmentalists were dressing up their doctrinaire technophobic opposition to all things nuclear behind scaremongering and often threadbare arguments about cost.
  • (13) The shutdown has closed national parks, museums and monuments, and reduced many government departments and agencies to a threadbare staff.
  • (14) 5.03pm BST 1 min: The pitch is threadbare but also unnaturally green - a jarring combo.
  • (15) The threadbare agreement thrashed out last night has not even laid the foundations.
  • (16) This was not the home debut David Moyes had hoped for when he succeeded Sam Allardyce last month but Sunderland’s new manager deserves praise for making the best of some extremely threadbare resources.
  • (17) Since I arrived in the Netherlands last December, I did not get any money to buy a single item of clothing,” says Fahmi, still making do with a threadbare jacket and boots given to him by the Red Cross in Hungary.
  • (18) Some professors hold on to their careers for dear tenure, eking out threadbare research material and desperately placing articles in whichever journal will take them.
  • (19) Even the Liberal Democrats have joined this rhetorical arms race, ripping apart their threadbare integrity.
  • (20) Not bad for an entrepreneur who recalls helping his mum colour in the pattern on the family's threadbare carpets with oil paints when he was a child.

Vapid


Definition:

  • (a.) Having lost its life and spirit; dead; spiritless; insipid; flat; dull; unanimated; as, vapid beer; a vapid speech; a vapid state of the blood.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Beyond that, MSNBC devotes three hours each morning to a show hosted by a former rightwing GOP congressman and his cavalcade of vapid "centrist" establishment journalists such as Mark Halperin (then again, Fox features the idiosyncratic and unpredictable Shepard Smith each night).
  • (2) She comes across as vapid and totally uncouth without a bit of finesse about her.
  • (3) Greece Aligned to Eurovision's Balkan Bloc Not only is Saki Rouvas's This is Our Night marvellously, teeth-grindingly, competition-winningly vapid, but more importantly, Greece is the epicentre of the many-tentacled Balkan Bloc.
  • (4) The exhibition content is, in the main, as vapid as the architecture is extravagant.
  • (5) "I used to think that focusing on the visual aspect was really vapid and ridiculous too," she admits, "but I've come to realise it's actually one of the most powerful tools I have to work with.
  • (6) Since then, while some mainstream rap has veered to the materialistic and misogynistic, there have always been successful rappers who have rallied against the vapid.
  • (7) For while humanists work hard to create new ceremonies, many find them vapid.
  • (8) She zeited the geist of the mid-90s superbly, but Bridget, never trying be too strident (offputting to men) was for me the epitome of post-feminism – vapid, consumerist and self-obsessed.
  • (9) Vapid and sexless, pop was little more than a Smash Hits remake of American Bandstand three decades earlier.
  • (10) He may look vapid sometimes for Chelsea but he has scored nine goals in Europe and there are only two players, Cristiano Ronaldo and Robert Lewandowski, with more this season.
  • (11) For the majority, however, the primary concern is not vapid rhetoric, nor even resentment about expenses fiddling, which parts of the media have now elevated above substantive policy arguments for years.
  • (12) For Brazil, there was also the added satisfaction of seeing Fred, who has been the subject of so much criticism following his vapid displays against Croatia and Mexico, get on the scoresheet.
  • (13) In his thoughtful demeanour seems to be an implicit criticism of the vapidity of today's world.
  • (14) Nobody has been subjected to these vapid discrediting techniques more than Noam Chomsky.
  • (15) It's said by a really vapid character who we're not meant to like.
  • (16) Facebook Twitter Pinterest Game of Thrones: spectacular but vapid.
  • (17) As one of their champions, Bono, recently put it in the New York Times , their music "contains all the big themes and ideas that make all around them seem so vapid".
  • (18) And indeed, see what happened in 2008 when Politico's own Mike Allen interviewed George Bush with questions so vapid and reverent that it would have shamed his profession if it were capable of that.
  • (19) United did not play anywhere close to their top level but they did not have to when their opponents were so vapid.
  • (20) Vapid passages can be forgiven if they are followed by substance.