Word info Synonyms Antonyms

bore

Speech parts

1. bore - Noun

2. bore - Verb

Derived from bear

Meaning

of Bear

To perforate or penetrate, as a solid body, by turning an auger, gimlet, drill, or other instrument; to make a round hole in or through; to pierce; as, to bore a plank.

To form or enlarge by means of a boring instrument or apparatus; as, to bore a steam cylinder or a gun barrel; to bore a hole.

To make (a passage) by laborious effort, as in boring; as, to bore one's way through a crowd; to force a narrow and difficult passage through.

To weary by tedious iteration or by dullness; to tire; to trouble; to vex; to annoy; to pester.

To befool; to trick.

To make a hole or perforation with, or as with, a boring instrument; to cut a circular hole by the rotary motion of a tool; as, to bore for water or oil (i. e., to sink a well by boring for water or oil); to bore with a gimlet; to bore into a tree (as insects).

To be pierced or penetrated by an instrument that cuts as it turns; as, this timber does not bore well, or is hard to bore.

To push forward in a certain direction with laborious effort.

To shoot out the nose or toss it in the air; -- said of a horse.

A hole made by boring; a perforation.

The internal cylindrical cavity of a gun, cannon, pistol, or other firearm, or of a pipe or tube.

The size of a hole; the interior diameter of a tube or gun barrel; the caliber.

A tool for making a hole by boring, as an auger.

Caliber; importance.

A person or thing that wearies by prolixity or dullness; a tiresome person or affair; any person or thing which causes ennui.

A tidal flood which regularly or occasionally rushes into certain rivers of peculiar configuration or location, in one or more waves which present a very abrupt front of considerable height, dangerous to shipping, as at the mouth of the Amazon, in South America, the Hoogly and Indus, in India, and the Tsien-tang, in China.

Less properly, a very high and rapid tidal flow, when not so abrupt, such as occurs at the Bay of Fundy and in the British Channel.

imp. of 1st & 2d Bear.

Source: Webster's dictionary

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Examples

Every hero becomes a bore at last. Ralph Waldo Emerson

People find ideas a bore because they do not distinguish between live ones and stuffed ones on a shelf. Ezra Pound

It's so much easier to pray for a bore than to go and see one. C. S. Lewis

Does your neighbor bore you? Lend him some money. Italian Proverb

Cuss-cuss noh bore hole a mi skin. Jamaican Proverb

Quiet worms will bore a hole in the wall. Japanese Proverb

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