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Word: tedious (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...fulsome section on telephone and recording etiquette includes advice on ending a tedious call (hang up when you are speaking, not the bore) and disconnection (the person who placed the call should re-call). This seems obvious, as does the reminder that an answering machine means you don't have to pick up on every call...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: NOTES ON NETIQUETTE | 10/20/2005 | See Source »

Over the course of a tedious year (distractions—classes, my thesis—kept popping up), I wrote up the situation and discussed it multiple times with my department chair. By the end of senior spring, I had also sought advice from my Senior Tutor, the Bureau of Study Counsel, a University Ombudsman, and a senior administrator in University Hall. Every one I talked to offered condolences—“Well, that’s really too bad,” or “I’m sorry that happened?...

Author: By Susan E. Mcgregor, | Title: Consumer Education | 9/20/2005 | See Source »

When I slept through successive visits to the Boston Symphony Orchestra, I never once blamed the music or conductor to be “sordid,” “tedious,” “egotistic,” “uninspired,” or any of the myriad missives that the author uses against the festival. Instead, I admitted that I could not just appreciate the music. Such an admission is beneath the author, who proceeds with his snide remarks: incompetent journalists, “tough locals,” thieving Rastafarians...

Author: By Isaac N. Ochieng, | Title: Myopic View of PANAFEST Illustrates Writer’s Prejudices | 9/12/2005 | See Source »

PANAFEST—not an acronym, but unfailingly capitalized by Ghanaian journalists—is a sordid affair that mixes tedious, egotistic African government types with local Rastafarians conniving to profit off of stupid tourists with the mushy, self-righteous black American tourists themselves, coming “back to Africa” to rediscover their roots...

Author: By Travis R. Kavulla, | Title: Delusions in the Dark Continent | 8/12/2005 | See Source »

...African politicos, meanwhile, gave speeches so uninspired, tedious, and off-topic that they visibly embarrassed many of the expat participants. “The Special Advisor to the Honourable Minister of Tourism and Modernisation of the Capital City,” whose title was announced in full ad nauseum, gave a speech that embodied the tenor. The only time this man lit up was a one-paragraph run (out of what must have been a 50-page speech) where he named some of Ghana’s many problems, hinting that blacks in the diaspora could help out a little...

Author: By Travis R. Kavulla, | Title: Delusions in the Dark Continent | 8/12/2005 | See Source »

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