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TOEFL IELTS BNC: 8426 COCA: 10501

tedious

1 ENTRIES FOUND:
tedious /ˈtiːdijəs/ adjective
tedious
/ˈtiːdijəs/
adjective
Learner's definition of TEDIOUS
[more tedious; most tedious]
: boring and too slow or long拖沓的;乏味的;冗长的

— tediously

adverb

— tediousness

noun [noncount]
TOEFL IELTS BNC: 8426 COCA: 10501

tedious

adjective

te·​dious ˈtē-dē-əs How to pronounce tedious (audio)
ˈtē-jəs
: tiresome because of length or dullness : boring
a tedious public ceremony
tediously adverb
tediousness noun

Did you know?

The Long and Uneventful History of Tedious

Words frequently change their meanings, and some even will go from meaning one thing to meaning something almost opposite (such as nice, which in its earliest use meant "lewd, wanton, dissolute"). Tedious is not one of these words; its meanings may have shifted over the centuries, but they have always had something to do with irksome, boring, or overlong things. The word comes from the Latin taedēre, meaning “to disgust or weary.”Tedious has been in use since the 15th century and has been included in hundreds of dictionaries, although perhaps none have rendered so poetic and succinct a definition as Nathaniel Bailey’s entry in his 1756 New Universal Etymological English Dictionary: “Wearisome by continuance.”

Example Sentences

Writing a new spreadsheet or word-processing program these days is a tedious process, like building a skyscraper out of toothpicks. Jeff Goodell, Rolling Stone, 16 June 1994 Another of their assignments was to slow-fly any plane that had a new engine to break it in; that meant flying the aircraft for a tedious hour-and-a-half as slowly as it would possibly go without falling out of the sky. Doris Weatherford, American Women and World War II, 1990 From there, it became clear that the deposition was going to be neither as undramatic nor as quotidian, and even tedious, as it at first appeared. Renata Adler, New Yorker, June 23, 1986 He made a tedious 45-minute speech. The work is tedious, but it needs to get done.
Recent Examples on the Web Covid has forced us to wrap ourselves more in our digital personas (Facebook, Zoom, Amazon, etc.) and managing them is time consuming and tedious. Michael Gale, Forbes, 2 Aug. 2022 These difficulties tempt presidents to replace the tedious and often-thankless legislative process with brisk executive action. William A. Galston, WSJ, 26 July 2022 Developing new treatments for ailments can be a tedious and frustrating process for scientists. Mike Wehner, BGR, 19 May 2022 One of the most tedious—and sometimes heartbreaking—parts about wearing a great eye look is the inevitable task of having to eventually wash it away. Tiffany Dodson, Harper's BAZAAR, 26 Aug. 2022 The live feed is, for the most part, tedious and mind-numbing. Scott D. Pierce, The Salt Lake Tribune, 7 July 2022 Each pot is hand-painted, which is a bit tedious and time-consuming, Sims says. Melanie Curry, Good Housekeeping, 6 July 2022 Water experts agree the process will be tedious and time-consuming, with the threat of litigation looming over the entire process. San Diego Union-Tribune, 4 June 2022 Even those omnipresent Coachella photo shoots seemed less tedious. Cathy Applefeld Olson, Forbes, 26 Apr. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

Middle English, from Late Latin taediosus, from Latin taedium — see tedium

First Known Use

15th century, in the meaning defined above

Time Traveler
The first known use of tedious was in the 15th century
TOEFL IELTS BNC: 8426 COCA: 10501
tedious

adjective

VERBS | ADVERB VERBSbe, seem, sound單調乏味;好像單調乏味;聽起來乏味become, get變得令人厭煩Her visits were starting to get a little tedious.她的來訪開始有點兒讓人生厭了。make sth使⋯變得乏味find sth覺得⋯乏味He found committee meetings extremely tedious.他覺得委員會會議乏味至極。ADVERBextremely, fairly, very, etc.極其/相當/非常乏味incredibly, mind-numbingly異乎尋常地/令人麻木地乏味a bit, slightly, etc.有點兒/略有些乏味increasingly越來越乏味The joke became increasingly tedious.笑話變得越來越乏味。

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