adj.
Uninteresting and tiresome; dull.
boringly bor'ing·ly adv.
boringness bor'ing·ness n.
SYNONYMS boring, monotonous, tedious, irksome, tiresome, humdrum. These adjectives refer to what is so uninteresting as to cause mental weariness. Boring implies feelings of listlessness and discontent: I had never read such a boring book. What is monotonous bores because of lack of variety: "There is nothing so desperately monotonous as the sea" (James Russell Lowell). Tedious suggests dull slowness or long-windedness: Traveling by plane avoids spending tedious days on the train. Irksome describes what is demanding of time and effort and yet is dull and often unrewarding: "I know and feel what an irksome task the writing of long letters is" (Edmund Burke). Something tiresome fatigues because it seems to be interminable or to be marked by unremitting sameness: "What a tiresome being is a man who is fond of talking" (Benjamin Jowett). Humdrum refers to what is commonplace, trivial, or unexcitingly routine: My quiet cousin led a humdrum existence.
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more boring, most boring
Most boring.
more boring and most boring
boring boring boring
Boring is a verb. It is the present particle of the verb bore - I am boring a hole into the wall. Boring is an adjective - We had a boring evening. Boring is a noun - The boring of the new well started yesterday. Boring is not an adverb. Boringly is an adverb.
more boring, most boring
more boring
They are not boring...
its not boring
Clubpenguin just gets boring and boring even the map got even more boring Music jam is boring everything they made is boring but old cp ROCKED
Boring, Very Boring, Unbelievably Boring, Suicidely Boring
You're boring.