[
UK
/dʒˈeɪdɪd/
]
[ US /ˈdʒeɪdəd, ˈdʒeɪdɪd/ ]
[ US /ˈdʒeɪdəd, ˈdʒeɪdɪd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
dulled by surfeit
the amoral, jaded, bored upper classes -
exhausted
my father's words had left me jaded and depressed
How To Use jaded In A Sentence
- It could have been the springboard to victory over the Hammers but the players looked jaded. The Sun
- I suppose the major reason I’m feeling so jaded is that the mystery has gone out of wine for me. Rants
- But all in all, what with the weather and a degree of jadedness occasioned by a bit of sleep disturbance, it's not been a thrilling day.
- Heat-jaded Sahibs and Memsahibs came here to escape the coast's hottest months, they invented snooker at the pukka Ooty Club and came to gossip at Charing Cross - locations were named by the British.
- Some of the images here caused even this reviewer to quiver a jaded eyebrow.
- It's unfortunate, however, that he has to rely on jaded Irish clichés of booze and blarney to enliven a story that is powerful enough to survive on its own merits.
- Surely only the most jaded and damaged would challenge the orthodoxy of romantic love. Times, Sunday Times
- In the hands of lesser songsmiths, such lines would inevitably sound like so much rot, but Gough has a peculiar charm about him that gradually disarms the jaded listener.
- Pity that their dry northern humour seems a little jaded. The Sun
- I believe that I play the game well for I am still unjaded, which is unusual with so much over-feeding. Letters of a Dakota Divorcee