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  • PABLUM Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
    Sean Gregory, Time, 18 Feb 2026 The Rip, from the director Joe Carnahan, is a cop drama where macho guys (and gals) tote carbine rifles and grunt law-enforcement lingo—the kind of crime-genre pablum that commonly gets thrown onto Netflix in mid-January
  • Pablum - Wikipedia
    Pablum is a processed cereal for infants originally marketed and co-created by the Mead Johnson Company in 1931 The product was developed at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto to combat infant malnutrition
  • Pablum - definition of Pablum by The Free Dictionary
    Intellectual material that is bland, trite, or insipid: "It was the sort of pablum routinely pronounced by State Department spokesmen when they had no real policy to describe" (Steve Coll)
  • Word of the Day: PABLUM - by Mike Bergin - Roots2Words
    First came pabulum, which derives from the root PA- meaning to feed or protect Next came Pablum, the vitamin-fortified infant cereal developed in 1930 to prevent rickets and malnutrition in babies
  • pablum - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
    A bowl of pablum (sense 2) for a baby made of fennel and potatoes
  • Pablum, n. meanings, etymology and more | Oxford English Dictionary
    Pablum, n meanings, etymology, pronunciation and more in the Oxford English Dictionary
  • Pablum - Definition, Meaning, and Examples in English
    Pablum refers to a substance that is bland, insipid, or ineffective, often lacking in substance or engaging quality It can also denote a type of baby food, but more commonly, it denotes overly simplistic or trivial ideas or content that lacks depth
  • Pablum - Etymology, Origin Meaning - Etymonline
    Pablum (1932), derived from this, is a trademark (Mead Johnson Co ) for a soft, bland cereal used as a food for infants and weak and invalid persons, hence its figurative use (attested from 1970, first by U S Vice President Spiro Agnew) in reference to "mushy" political prose


















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