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Dreariness   /drˈɪrinəs/   Listen
Dreariness

noun
1.
Extreme dullness; lacking spirit or interest.  Synonyms: boringness, insipidity, insipidness.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Dreariness" Quotes from Famous Books



... are regularly brought around by the different seasons. But the moral, the symbol, is still the same as regards final immortality. For if summer answers to the heyday of noon, autumn to the milder glow and the extinction of evening, and winter to the joyless dreariness of night, spring, like the morning, ever brings back the god, the hero, in the perfect splendor of a glorious resurrection. It was the solar-year myth with its magnificent accompaniment of astronomical pageantry, which took the greater hold on the fancy of the scientifically inclined ...
— Chaldea - From the Earliest Times to the Rise of Assyria • Znade A. Ragozin

... we revel in the luxury of mere sensation. But in the depth of winter, when Nature lies despoiled of every charm, and wrapped in her shroud of sheeted snow, we turn our gratifications to moral sources. The dreariness and desolation of the landscape, the short gloomy days and darksome nights, while they circumscribe our wanderings, shut in also our feelings from rambling abroad, and make us more keenly disposed for the ...
— Practical Grammar and Composition • Thomas Wood

... increasing rain, the dreariness of the road, the moanful wind in the tops of the trees; he felt that to be alone was to suppress a part of his happiness, that his light and talkative heart must seek a hearing for the babbling of its ...
— An Arkansas Planter • Opie Percival Read

... Barberini family, not French]) seems to be quartered, while no doubt princes have magnificent domiciles above. Be it palace or whatever other dwelling, the inmates climb through rubbish often to the comforts, such as they may be, that await them above. I vainly try to get down upon paper the dreariness, the ugliness, shabbiness, un-home-likeness of a Roman street. It is also to be said that you cannot go far in any direction without coming to a piazza, which is sometimes little more than a widening and enlarging of the dingy street, with the lofty facade of a church or basilica on one side, and ...
— Passages From the French and Italian Notebooks, Complete • Nathaniel Hawthorne

... is rather trite," said Oliver. "I know only one thing that can preserve it from commonplaceness and dullness and dreariness." ...
— Brooke's Daughter - A Novel • Adeline Sergeant


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