Word for inane words used for emphasis

"The most very best you will ever in the universe" There's a word for the category of words such as the above, words that are used to emphasise something without adding any content by themselves.

Those words that are used a lot in marketing and in reviews to convey "wowing".

I can't find it.


Edit: In retrospect the question wasn't clear enough, and the word I was looking for (Superlative) isn't necessarily the correct answer to the question. But the answers to the original question are good, so I'm not changing it.
After rereading the question and the answers, I'd say that both Intensifier and Puffery are good answers to the question as-is.
I decided to mark Intensifier as the answer because it relates to the modifiers themselves rather than to the phrasing as a whole, and because it was interesting to read about it.


Solution 1:

I believe the term you are looking for is intensifier, which is a term for

a modifier that makes no contribution to the propositional meaning of a clause but serves to enhance and give additional emotional context to the word it modifies. [Wikipedia]

In other words, it's just fluff intended to excite without informing.

Solution 2:

The UK Advertising Standards Agency calls such terms 'puffery':

3.2 Obvious exaggerations (“puffery”) and claims that the average consumer who sees the marketing communication is unlikely to take literally are allowed provided they do not materially mislead.

Here's a lawyer's interpretation of that, based on the ASA's adjudications of previous cases:

But what about claims which aren’t meant to be taken literally? Which are obviously untrue or exaggerated? For example, “Our car is so phenomenal that if you look at it too long your head will fall off”. These claims are known as “puffery”, and (thankfully) you don’t need to prove that these claims are literally true. ...

So when complainants challenged T-Mobile’s offer of “unlimited free texts forever” for customers who topped-up each month, the ASA considered that “consumers were likely to interpret the claim as containing an element of advertising puffery and were unlikely to infer that texts would be available literally forever.” Likewise, Procter & Gamble successfully defended a cat’s “comments” in their TV ad for Iams dry cat food (“Don’t get me wrong I like water; I just prefer to drink mine”) as either puffery, or just the individual cat’s feline opinion...

Advertising & Marketing Newsnotes: Distinguishing between mere puffery and misleading claims, Geraint Lloyd-Taylor for Lewis Silkin, 25 Jan 2013

ODO: puffery

Exaggerated or false praise

There has always been a fine line between legitimate puffery and misleading advertising.

Savvy readers soon learn to discount this overt puffery.

Overall, though, despite the blizzard of facts and figures, both candidates generally limited themselves to modest exaggerations and standard issue political puffery.

Solution 3:

What comes to mind is hyperbole, as MW says:

extravagant exaggeration (as “mile-high ice-cream cones”)

This does not cover the ungrammatical use that your example shows, but it certainly covers most instances of advertising extravaganza as well as over-enthusiastic review texts.

Solution 4:

To be pedantic, pfff asked for the word that means words that are inane which are used for emphasis. That is, not the name of otherwise useful words which have been exploited to make an emphatic statement.

Silly or inane words are those like "Yowza" or "Ginormous". Therefore, perhaps a suitable name for such words is "onomatopes"?