tiring 1 of 2

Definition of tiringnext
as in boring
causing weariness, restlessness, or lack of interest the seminar was tiring and not particularly helpful or informative

Synonyms & Similar Words

Relevance

Antonyms & Near Antonyms

tiring

2 of 2

verb

present participle of tire
1
2
3

Example Sentences

Examples are automatically compiled from online sources to show current usage. Read More Opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback.
Recent Examples of tiring
Adjective
Riko Ueki headed Japan's opening goal, her fourth of the tournament, before Maika Hamano, Aoba Fujino and Kiko Seike all scored against a tiring Vietnamese defense. ABC News, 10 Mar. 2026 But this relief rally may be tiring for now and the optimal reward seems skewed to the downside. Jay Woods, CNBC, 5 Mar. 2026
Verb
This helps each step feel lighter and easier, diminishing fatigue and letting the wearer venture out farther without tiring. New Atlas, 3 Dec. 2025 This constant barrage overshadows the self-care experience, hijacking my focus and frankly, tiring me out. Caelan McMichael, Allure, 7 Oct. 2025 See All Example Sentences for tiring
Recent Examples of Synonyms for tiring
Adjective
  • Curry is pure entertainment, and the NBA is a little more boring without him.
    Sports Columnist, San Francisco Chronicle, 1 Apr. 2026
  • One does detect in Iran hawks a kind of 'will to destruction' and hatred of boring, civilized diplomacy.
    Jesus Mesa, MSNBC Newsweek, 31 Mar. 2026
Verb
  • Anthropic's showdown with the Pentagon this year left OpenAI looking like the bad guy, and just this week Bloomberg reported that demand is weakening for private shares of OpenAI in the secondary market.
    Alexei Oreskovic, Fortune, 3 Apr. 2026
  • But those safeguards appear to be weakening.
    Jennifer Elias,Jonathan Vanian, CNBC, 3 Apr. 2026
Verb
  • Both countries aim to counter cheap, high-volume threats without exhausting high-value interceptors.
    Aamir Khollam, Interesting Engineering, 2 Apr. 2026
  • Most people who reach out to Gahl do so after exhausting nearly every other option and cycling through multiple specialists and medical centers.
    Alexandra Sifferlin, STAT, 31 Mar. 2026
Verb
  • Curry, wearing a bulky wrap around his knee, leaned back and took a long, deep breath before exhaling as the game tipped off.
    Joseph Dycus, Mercury News, 6 Apr. 2026
  • Her heart features the side profiles of two residents wearing Indigenous attire in the foreground, and a map of the city’s East Side, with street names like Indiana Avenue, Holmes Street and Troost Avenue behind them.
    Kansas City Star, Kansas City Star, 5 Apr. 2026
Verb
  • The professor, ​​who previously taught at Ferris State University in Michigan, acknowledged Denver’s softening apartment market, where vacancy is at its highest point since 2010.
    Matthew Geiger, Denver Post, 7 Apr. 2026
  • Despite the rate of unemployment remaining low, the labor market has shown signs of softening.
    Domenico Montanaro, NPR, 3 Apr. 2026
Verb
  • Even for those spared personal catastrophe, the broader atmosphere has been wearying; institutions strained, norms eroded, tempers short.
    Phillip Halpern, San Diego Union-Tribune, 16 Jan. 2026
  • And then, with wearying inevitability, the Premier League would follow suit.
    Oliver Kay, New York Times, 23 Oct. 2025
Verb
  • But last year a single pack was responsible for killing about 100 calves in less than seven months in the high ranchland of Sierra County north of Truckee, costing ranchers and the state millions and terrifying residents.
    Sharon Bernstein, Sacbee.com, 8 Apr. 2026
  • Prosecutors, meanwhile, argue that Clancy carefully planned and plotted before allegedly killing her three children by sending her husband out of the house.
    Chris Spargo, PEOPLE, 8 Apr. 2026
Adjective
  • In fact, businesses hired workers at their slowest pace since 2011, excluding the onset of the pandemic in 2020.
    Morgan Chittum, CNBC, 3 Apr. 2026
  • The area’s large tourist population contributes a constant volume of unfamiliar drivers to already heavily congested roads, with traffic patterns that shift significantly between peak tourist season and the summer months but never truly slow to manageable levels on the area’s major corridors.
    Anton Lucanus April 3, Miami Herald, 3 Apr. 2026

Browse Nearby Words

Cite this Entry

“Tiring.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/tiring. Accessed 9 Apr. 2026.

More from Merriam-Webster on tiring

Love words? Need even more definitions?

Subscribe to America's largest dictionary and get thousands more definitions and advanced search—ad free!

More from Merriam-Webster