[ US /ˈjɔnɝ/ ]
NOUN
  1. a person who yawns
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How To Use yawner In A Sentence

  • For many years, ‘boring, boring’ Arsenal were pleased with squeaking out 1-0 yawners over their more adventurous, stylish rivals.
  • What may sound like a routine yawner is really a meeting at which nothing less than the future of Europe will be decided - and especially Germany's role in that future.
  • By contrast, the current slowdown in the U.S. economy might rank as a bit of a yawner.
  • Now, the G-8 summit in years past, critics would say, was a bit of a yawner.
  • But if the headline event was a bit of a yawner, it showed that the global powers-that-be are groping toward better understanding of the developing nations and their concerns about the dangers of globalization.
  • They're a corporate services firm, which in the grand scheme of things is a real yawner.
  • Tracks with yawners like Mack 10, Insane Clown Posse and E40 do nothing to help the album's inevitable downward slide.
  • ‘What a yawner,’ the guard's eyes were slightly mesmerized by the bright, gray light emanating from the television screens.
  • Friday's jobs report was a yawner. Times, Sunday Times
  • It started off as the usual sort of Junior High yawner: police interrupting the Holston Middle School's curriculum to talk about the dangers of drunk driving.
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