Boredom in a sentence as a noun

It wasn't boredom that made them change their job, any job is boring after a few years.

It's much more effected by things like boredom and engagement than anything else.

I'm not sure how staring at the ground addresses ******* risk, as I do not believe anyone is dying of boredom here.> War is ****.

One can look for ages without finding a $50 bounty, so long that boredom would probably set in and the hunt would be abandoned.

Too much process, too many clueless managers, too hard to get work done?Sometimes boredom is a result of giving up the fight.

Maybe the factory pays well enough, the boredom is manageable, and the guy's got friends and family and is happy.

Points that are intended to be remembered are mentioned over and over again to the point of mind-numbing boredom.

Not only is it more efficient than trying to reduce complex humans to a few "metrics", but it will allow you to detect more than just "boredom".

Secondly, the article states that "Schools seem to have forgotten that students learn best when they are engaged; in fact, the biggest problem in schools is boredom.

His creative intelligence, stifled by too much theory and too many grades in college, would now become reawakened by the boredom of the shop.

At best we have won the war on idleness, which is only a lite version of it. If anything, these ****-time gadgets exacerbate the deep boredom problem, what Pessoa calls tedium:Tedium is not the disease of being bored because theres nothing to do, but the more serious disease of feeling that theres nothing worth doing.

Variety does stave off boredom its fun to mix in new exercises all the time but a guy who hasnt trained in a long time, if ever, will get stronger faster on the simplest program of squats, dead lifts, and presses, three times a week.

As for executives, they're disciplined, they can enjoy their easy jobs and high compensation and accept the boredom associated with rarely being needed, because if things are running well, they aren't operationally necessary.

"You sound like a typical bored teenager, with too much time on their hands, wearing their boredom as a nihilistic badge of honor, expecting everyone to entertain them, while simultaneously acting as if they know everything, thereby supposedly being superior to the entertainers.

Boredom definitions

noun

the feeling of being bored by something tedious

See also: ennui tedium