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Boring   /bˈɔrɪŋ/   Listen
Boring

adjective
1.
So lacking in interest as to cause mental weariness.  Synonyms: deadening, dull, ho-hum, irksome, slow, tedious, tiresome, wearisome.  "The deadening effect of some routine tasks" , "A dull play" , "His competent but dull performance" , "A ho-hum speaker who couldn't capture their attention" , "What an irksome task the writing of long letters is" , "Tedious days on the train" , "The tiresome chirping of a cricket" , "Other people's dreams are dreadfully wearisome"
noun
1.
The act of drilling.  Synonym: drilling.
2.
The act of drilling a hole in the earth in the hope of producing petroleum.  Synonyms: drilling, oil production.



Bore

verb
(past & past part. bored; pres. part. boring)
1.
Cause to be bored.  Synonym: tire.  Antonym: interest.
2.
Make a hole, especially with a pointed power or hand tool.  Synonym: drill.  "Drill a hole into the wall" , "Drill for oil" , "Carpenter bees are boring holes into the wall"



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"Boring" Quotes from Famous Books



... as Rose was well aware, found his conversation boring. But it always interested her. In fact Rose Otway was the one person in Witanbury who listened with real pleasure to what Jervis Blake had to say. Oddly enough, his talk almost always ran on military matters. Most soldiers—and ...
— Good Old Anna • Marie Belloc Lowndes

... machine shop of the Midvale Steel Company, the writer began a systematic study of the laws involved in the first and second problems above referred to by devoting the entire time of a large vertical boring mill to this work, with special arrangements for varying the drive so as to obtain any desired speed. The needed uniformity of the metal was obtained by using large locomotive tires of known chemical composition, ...
— Shop Management • Frederick Winslow Taylor

... the hospital here. I live in the hope that some day I may write its history, and may be able to say something which will not be open to the charge of, "Oh! Another boring book about the War!" As I conceive it, my hospital book will be an analysis of the mind and character of the British working-man with his defensive armour off, and not an attempt to give any views on military or medical reform and ...
— The Adventure of Living • John St. Loe Strachey

... I looked out of the window and watched the vulgar blackbirds, with toes turned in, boring out their worms, I realized sharply that even they, as indeed everything large and small in the house and grounds, shared this strangeness, and were twisted out of normal appearance because of it. Life, as expressed in the entire place, was crumpled, ...
— The Damned • Algernon Blackwood

... mortars with the besiegers, except what the navy had in front of the city; but wooden ones were made by taking logs of the toughest wood that could be found, boring them out for six or twelve pound shells and binding them with strong iron bands. These answered as cochorns, and shells were successfully thrown from them into the ...
— Memoirs of Three Civil War Generals, Complete • U. S. Grant, W. T. Sherman, P. H. Sheridan


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