¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Boredoms
1. boredom [n] - See also: boredom
Lexicographical Neighbors of Boredoms
Literary usage of Boredoms
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Thomas Carlyle: A History of His Life in London, 1834-1881 by James Anthony Froude (1884)
"... boredoms. His journal shows a gradual but slow, very slow recovery out of his
long prostration. Journal. February 28, 1854. ..."
2. Dramatic Opinions and Essays, with an Apology: With an Apology by Bernard Shaw (1907)
"... those of my readers who find a pantomime once a year good for them, to go next
year to the Britannia, and leave the West End to its boredoms and all the ..."
3. The Path to Rome by Hilaire Belloc (1902)
"How much rather I wish that being free from mundane and wide-awake (that is to
say, from perilously dusty) considerations and droughty boredoms, ..."
4. The Medical and Surgical Reporter (1881)
"He thinks it deserves special attention from Americans, as there they escape the
social boredoms so frequent in most of the resorts nearer home. ..."
5. Thomas Carlyle: A History of His Life in London, 1834-1881 by James Anthony Froude (1884)
"... boredoms. His journal shows a gradual but slow, very slow recovery out of his
long prostration. Journal. February 28, 1854. ..."
6. Dramatic Opinions and Essays, with an Apology: With an Apology by Bernard Shaw (1907)
"... those of my readers who find a pantomime once a year good for them, to go next
year to the Britannia, and leave the West End to its boredoms and all the ..."
7. The Path to Rome by Hilaire Belloc (1902)
"How much rather I wish that being free from mundane and wide-awake (that is to
say, from perilously dusty) considerations and droughty boredoms, ..."
8. The Medical and Surgical Reporter (1881)
"He thinks it deserves special attention from Americans, as there they escape the
social boredoms so frequent in most of the resorts nearer home. ..."