Jaded in a sentence as an adjective

Don't end up a jaded burnt out 40 year old engineer.

The TSA has gotten a lot more jaded and hated since then.

Am I just becoming old, jaded and too elitist for my own good?

It is enough to give anyone a very jaded view of law and how its outworkings can harm people.

I feel really jaded for daring to think it, but I really hope he has the releases set up on a deadman's switch.

I'm not so jaded as to think that deep language understanding isn't a useful or good thing, and I'd like to think I have some myself.

The main issue is that the music buying public is jaded, fragmented and far less easily manipulated into buying than in the past.

The article comes across overly jaded, though I suppose the idea to not start a media company or buy residential housing are both good pieces of advice!

Say what you will but the quality of discussions is devolving into a big who-can-act-more-jaded-and-know-it-all-ish contest.

Or any country where the government is sufficiently closed and non-democratic?Look at how slanted, jaded, corrupt and inept the US gov't has become and we have much more visibility into those dealings.

I've become extremely jaded against intellectual property recently.

Perhaps it's my jaded brand of libertarianism showing: I'm inclined to say that media companies have just as much a right to make it hard for me to give them money as I have a right to continue not giving them money.

Maybe I'm stupidly jaded, and it's one of the things that has steadily pushed me out of the Apple ecosystem, but this trend for overly emotional marketing of stuff, especially in the hipster end of the market, grates enormously.

Jaded definitions

adjective

exhausted; "my father's words had left me jaded and depressed"- William Styron

See also: wearied

adjective

dulled by surfeit; "the amoral, jaded, bored upper classes"