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1 tedious
'ti:diəs(boring and continuing for a long time: a tedious speech/speaker.) trettende, kjedsommelig- tediousness
- tediumkjed--------kjedelig--------langtekkeligadj. \/ˈtiːdjəs\/kjedelig, kjedsommelig, trettende, langtekkelig -
2 affair
ə'feə1) (happenings etc which are connected with a particular person or thing: the Suez affair.) sak, begivenhet, affære2) (a thing: The new machine is a weird-looking affair.) sak, greie3) ((often in plural) business; concern(s): financial affairs; Where I go is entirely my own affair.) sak, anliggende4) (a love relationship: His wife found out about his affair with another woman.) kjærlighetsforholdaffære--------forretning--------sak--------tingsubst. \/əˈfeə\/1) anliggende, sak, affæredet er\/blir min egen sak2) hendelse, historie3) sak, greie, dings4) kjærlighetsforholdaffair of honour duellaffairs forhold, anliggender, forretningeraffairs of state statsanliggenderas affairs stand som forholdene er\/ligger an, som saken stårat the head of affairs i spissen (for det hele)current affairs aktuelle spørsmål, aktuelle problemereconomic affairs finanssaker, finansaffærerforeign affairs utenrikssakerhave an affair with ha et forhold til, ha en kjærlighetsaffære medmind one's own affairs passe sine egne sakerpublic affairs offentlige anliggenderstate of affairs sakens tilstand, slik\/som forholdene er
См. также в других словарях:
Tedious — Te di*ous, a. [L. taediosus, fr. taedium. See {Tedium}.] Involving tedium; tiresome from continuance, prolixity, slowness, or the like; wearisome. {Te di*ous*ly}, adv. {Te di*ous*ness}, n. [1913 Webster] I see a man s life is a tedious one. Shak … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
tedious — (adj.) early 15c., from O.Fr. tedieus, from L.L. taediosus wearisome, irksome, tedious, from L. taedium (see TEDIUM (Cf. tedium)) … Etymology dictionary
tedious — index jejune (dull), lifeless (dull), mundane, onerous, pedestrian, ponderous, prolix … Law dictionary
tedious — *irksome, tiresome, wearisome, boring Analogous words: burdensome, *onerous, oppressive: fatiguing, exhausting, fagging, jading (see TIRE vb): *slow, dilatory, deliberate Antonyms: exciting … New Dictionary of Synonyms
tedious — [adj] dull, monotonous annoying, arid, banal, boring, bromidic, drab, dragging, draggy*, dreary, drudging, dry, dull as dishwater*, dusty*, endless, enervating, exhausting, fatiguing, ho hum*, humdrum, insipid, irksome, laborious, lifeless,… … New thesaurus
tedious — ► ADJECTIVE ▪ too long, slow, or dull. DERIVATIVES tediously adverb tediousness noun. ORIGIN from Latin taedium tedium , from taedere be weary of … English terms dictionary
tedious — [tē′dē əs; ] occas. [ tē′jəs] adj. [ME < LL taediosus] full of tedium; long or verbose and wearisome; tiresome; boring tediously adv. tediousness n … English World dictionary
tedious — adj. VERBS ▪ be, seem, sound ▪ become, get ▪ Her visits were starting to get a little tedious. ▪ make sth … Collocations dictionary
tedious — [[t]ti͟ːdiəs[/t]] ADJ GRADED If you describe something such as a job, task, or situation as tedious, you mean it is boring and rather frustrating. Such lists are long and tedious to read. ...the tedious business of line by line programming. Syn:… … English dictionary
tedious — tediously, adv. tediousness, n. /tee dee euhs, tee jeuhs/, adj. 1. marked by tedium; long and tiresome: tedious tasks; a tedious journey. 2. wordy so as to cause weariness or boredom, as a speaker or writer; prolix. [1375 1425; late ME < ML… … Universalium
tedious — te|di|ous [ˈti:diəs] adj [Date: 1400 1500; : Late Latin; Origin: taediosus, from Latin taedium, from taedere to disgust, make tired ] something that is tedious continues for a long time and is not interesting = ↑boring ▪ The work was tiring and… … Dictionary of contemporary English