tediousness

[ UK /tˈiːdɪəsnəs/ ]
NOUN
  1. dullness owing to length or slowness
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How To Use tediousness In A Sentence

  • It is peppy, but not too peppy, giving us a sense of their controlled lifestyle and tediousness - this is the couple who is spending their vacation refinished furniture and wallpapering the guest room.
  • Its tediousness is proverbial; and so special is the care of life and the resolution to prevent a catastrophe, that not even was Crab permitted to travel in our carriage, which was attached to the train. Glimpses of Life and Manners in Persia
  • It can be as basic as a program that spares us from the tediousness of deleting spam from our email, or as evolved as one that simulates human interaction to answer customer service questions.
  • But besides being regarded as a literary curiosity, the subject derives importance by the light it throws on the state of learning in those dark and "bookless" days, and the illustrations gleaned in this way fully compensate for the tediousness of the research. Bibliomania in the Middle Ages
  • There were no tables of water in sight, though, and the tediousness of the walk was starting to get to me.
  • Because of the singleness and tediousness on representation, the traditional historical documentary lacks of visibility.
  • Under such a system, much of the tediousness of gross photography, such as sticker labeling, sticker removal, and image sorting will disappear.
  • Rather than dwelling on the tediousness of, say, running in the pool with a flotation belt for non-impact workouts, she visualized these sessions as steps toward the bigger picture - stabilizing her knee and getting back on skis.
  • Mixing in other characters helped reduce the tediousness of the fights. Superhero Nation: how to write superhero novels and comic books » How I Would Reboot Superman
  • Some of the biggest problems in medicine don't get written about, because they don't concern eye-catching things such as one patient's valiant struggle: they're protected from public scrutiny by a wall of tediousness. How flimsy research gets inferior drugs to market | Ben Goldacre
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