The difference between Bathos and Triviality

When used as nouns, bathos means overdone or treacly attempts to inspire pathos, whereas triviality means the quality of being trivial or unimportant.


check bellow for the other definitions of Bathos and Triviality

  1. Bathos as a noun:

    Overdone or treacly attempts to inspire pathos.

  2. Bathos as a noun (now, _, uncommon):

    Depth.

  3. Bathos as a noun (literature, the arts):

    Risible failure on the part of a work of art to properly affect its audience, particularly owing to anticlimax: an abrupt transition in style or subject from high to low. banality: unaffectingly cliché or trite treatment of a topic. immaturity: lack of serious treatment of a topic. hyperbole: excessiveness

  4. Bathos as a noun (literature, the arts):

    The ironic use of such failure for satiric or humorous effect.

  5. Bathos as a noun (uncommon):

    A nadir, a low point particularly in one's career.

  1. Triviality as a noun:

    The quality of being trivial or unimportant.

  2. Triviality as a noun:

    Something which is trivial or unimportant.