Boredness vs. Bored — What's the Difference?
Difference Between Boredness and Bored
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Compare with Definitions
Boredness
The state or condition of being bored; boredom.
Bored
To make a hole in or through, with or as if with a drill.
Bored
To form (a tunnel, for example) by drilling, digging, or burrowing.
Bored
To make a hole in or through something with or as if with a drill
"three types of protein that enable the cells to bore in and out of blood vessels" (Elisabeth Rosenthal).
Bored
To proceed or advance steadily or laboriously
A destroyer boring through heavy seas.
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Bored
To make weary by being dull, repetitive, or tedious
The movie bored us.
Bored
Past tense of bear1.
Bored
A hole or passage made by or as if by use of a drill.
Bored
A hollow, usually cylindrical chamber or barrel, as of a firearm.
Bored
The interior diameter of a hole, tube, or cylinder.
Bored
The caliber of a firearm.
Bored
A drilling tool.
Bored
One that is wearingly dull, repetitive, or tedious.
Bored
Simple past tense and past participle of bore
Bored
Suffering from boredom; mildly annoyed and restless through having nothing to do.
The piano teacher's bored look indicated he wasn't paying much attention to his pupil's lackluster rendition of Mozart's Requiem.
Bored
Perforated by a hole or holes.
Bored
Tired of the world; bored with life.
Bored
Uninterested because of frequent exposure or indulgence. Opposite of interested.
Bored
Tired of the world;
Bored with life
Strolled through the museum with a bored air
Bored
Uninterested because of frequent exposure or indulgence;
His blase indifference
A petulent blase air
The bored gaze of the successful film star
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