Dull in a sentence as a verb

It looks like all the other dull, un-Apple-like glass and beige — yes, beige — concrete blocks.

I was afraid to seek help because I assumed they'd put me on meds that would dull my thinking.

Now it's not just depressingly dull, it's also phony.

> If you take away the meme, and simply tell the story by itself, its dull and boring.

" quoth Gurth; "expound that to me, Wamba, for my brain is too dull, and my mind too vexed, to read riddles.

You can share in the dull roar of collaboration with people on other continents ALL DAY!

But for today's reader, this part is pretty dull, all tables of organization and maps of military districts.

I'm not gonna write your goddamn binary tree pricing algorithm or remove your varicose veins or argue about some dull point of legal text in court.

Dull in a sentence as an adjective

Sometimes people write blogs and get into apologetic because they feel an internal dull pain of an inconsistency.

It definitely makes me wish I could go be among geniuses for a day. Went to Mirman, though; so I know what it means to be dull among geniuses while you're being probed, overworked and experimented-upon.

It is interesting enough for me to forget the work stuff, and dull enough to induce me into a deeper relaxation state, which allows me to fall sleep fast.

"The result is rather typical of modern technology, an overall dullness of appearance so depressing that it must be overlaid with a veneer of "style" to make it acceptable.

You also get a "hit" of dopamine when there is a loud, surprising noise, and any number of similar situations. Including good, natural situations. Including normal sex. This doesn't mean that "your dopamine levels get out of whack".When you say that 'life just becomes more dull' and 'distracting yourself from negative emotions' it sounds like you are describing dysthymia or depression more than anything specific to porn.

Awesome article, delivering harsh stinging truth: "As disappointed visitors and new employees discover, Silicon Valley is a dull and ugly landscape of low-rise stucco office parks and immense traffic-clogged boulevards.

"the notion that the governments raisin-administrators ward off chaotic gyrations in prices far-fetched: walnut and citrus farmers, after all, have abandoned similar systems in recent years without any ill effects"This issue has been studied extensively - "agricultural central banks" are a bad way to deal with a perishable commodity because they shift demand volatility onto the government's balance sheet and so dull the incentive for supply to adjust, or find ways to become more versatile.

Dull definitions

verb

make dull in appearance; "Age had dulled the surface"

verb

become dull or lusterless in appearance; lose shine or brightness; "the varnished table top dulled with time"

verb

deaden (a sound or noise), especially by wrapping

See also: muffle mute damp dampen

verb

make numb or insensitive; "The shock numbed her senses"

See also: numb benumb blunt

verb

make dull or blunt; "Too much cutting dulls the knife's edge"

See also: blunt

verb

become less interesting or attractive

See also: pall

verb

make less lively or vigorous; "Middle age dulled her appetite for travel"

adjective

lacking in liveliness or animation; "he was so dull at parties"; "a dull political campaign"; "a large dull impassive man"; "dull days with nothing to do"; "how dull and dreary the world is"; "fell back into one of her dull moods"

adjective

emitting or reflecting very little light; "a dull glow"; "dull silver badly in need of a polish"; "a dull sky"

adjective

being or made softer or less loud or clear; "the dull boom of distant breaking waves"; "muffled drums"; "the muffled noises of the street"; "muted trumpets"

See also: muffled muted softened

adjective

so lacking in interest as to cause mental weariness; "a boring evening with uninteresting people"; "the deadening effect of some routine tasks"; "a dull play"; "his competent but dull performance"; "a ho-hum speaker who couldn't capture their attention"; "what an irksome task the writing of long letters is"- Edmund Burke; "tedious days on the train"; "the tiresome chirping of a cricket"- Mark Twain; "other people's dreams are dreadfully wearisome"

See also: boring deadening ho-hum irksome slow tedious tiresome wearisome

adjective

(of color) very low in saturation; highly diluted; "dull greens and blues"

adjective

not keenly felt; "a dull throbbing"; "dull pain"

adjective

slow to learn or understand; lacking intellectual acuity; "so dense he never understands anything I say to him"; "never met anyone quite so dim"; "although dull at classical learning, at mathematics he was uncommonly quick"- Thackeray; "dumb officials make some really dumb decisions"; "he was either normally stupid or being deliberately obtuse"; "worked with the slow students"

See also: dense dumb obtuse slow

adjective

(of business) not active or brisk; "business is dull (or slow)"; "a sluggish market"

See also: slow sluggish

adjective

not having a sharp edge or point; "the knife was too dull to be of any use"

adjective

blunted in responsiveness or sensibility; "a dull gaze"; "so exhausted she was dull to what went on about her"- Willa Cather

adjective

not clear and resonant; sounding as if striking with or against something relatively soft; "the dull thud"; "thudding bullets"

See also: thudding

adjective

darkened with overcast; "a dark day"; "a dull sky"; "the sky was leaden and thick"

See also: leaden