He has become bored with watching cheap women dance and gyrate for his pleasure. |
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He was finally bored with her youthful prettiness and desired her body no longer. |
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She was rather bored with her life in a small town in East Anglia and there and then decided to sell her house and join her son in New Zealand. |
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They have a windproof shelter, and if they get bored with being snowed in, they can eat the walls. |
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I am getting so bored with this for some reason but my dear friend Abbess is urging me to continue so I must. |
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He had been bored with architecture school, except, that is, for an encounter with a visiting lecturer, Buckminster Fuller. |
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I'm curious whether people are bored with me, or if spring fever is luring readers away from their keyboards and into the great outdoors. |
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I was stuck for something to drink, and bored with the usual beer or red wine, so Tracy suggested vodka and fresh orange. |
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Fiona explained that riding school ponies and horses occasionally get lazy and bored with the same daily routine. |
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It doesn't mean your husband is bored with you but don't get too mad if he does swing with another partner at the club. |
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At some point, however, she became bored with life in England and answered the call of the east. |
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But somewhere along the line, Mercedes got bored with merely being swish and swanky. |
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Far from being bored with the work by this time, they all seem to revel in it, creating the comedy through their characters' utter seriousness. |
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Salzman discovers that her young female researchers are bored with faux sensitivity and want biceps instead. |
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I get more intolerant and downright bored with this interminable, stomach-churning rubbish every year. |
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I haven't even succeeded in my most basic quest which is to find an everyday red plonk that I won't get bored with by the second glass. |
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People are bored with treadmills and cross-trainers, plugged into their headphones watching a TV screen. |
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Are you getting bored with the modern, slick and funky eateries around town? |
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Meanwhile Jonathan Strange, a charming, wealthy gadabout, takes up magic on a whim after becoming bored with trying to write lyric poetry. |
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He looked almost bored with repeating the message he had given on countless other occasions. |
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It is bored with just doing history and it wants more subjects, namely biology and Latin. |
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Norma was an actress and had worked with The Old Vic, but, bored with walk-on parts, she was trying to get a foothold elsewhere. |
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It is part of a drive to dispel a growing myth that work experience is only for those pupils who are bored with the academic curriculum. |
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I was bored with photographing co-operative green turtles, so I turned to barracuda, batfish, groupers and a lone zebra lionfish. |
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Or it could turn out that you get bored with the movie and wind up making out on the couch. |
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However, this could be minimized if every tunnel is bored with a road header with extremely strong drill bits. |
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If you're bored with Hollywood blockbusters and want a change from feel-good schmaltz, then I'd recommend this twisted family fairy tale. |
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Is it just us that gets utterly bored with Wimbledon by mid-way through the second week? |
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The singer has confessed he got fat after getting bored with bedding lots of different women. |
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When Mary Ellen gets bored with her reading, Grandpa knows a hunt for a bee tree is just what she needs. |
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I sat for a fairly long while, gazing out of the window, got bored with that, and went to pull out a few books of poetry. |
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We started dancing, but rapidly became bored with the bland, unimaginative hip-hop that was being played. |
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If you feel that kind of generativity, you'll never be bored with life. |
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I got bored with the landscape and decided to learn a bit of Belarusian. |
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But instead of settling down in a nice semi-detached with Mrs Che, he got bored with the office job, and went jaunting around South America with his biggest gun. |
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It's the world of an apparently mad rock star who's bored with it all and so contemptuous of the hangers-on that surround him, he speaks only to himself. |
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It could well become a tourist attraction in itself, as the city residents get bored with amusement parks, discotheques, shopping malls and hotels with familiar decor. |
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He seemed monumentally bored with all the shiny stuff on offer. |
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Soon bored with the rash of glass and steel slabs, deracinated architects could only turn to differences of shape and texture to stand for advancement. |
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Personally, I usually second-screen when I'm bored with the show. |
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As seems to happen with American soaps, the cast grow bored with being typecast, get bolshy, and push for stories where they can showcase their skills. |
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He was unhappily married, bored with parish duties and ill-equipped to climb the ecclesiastical greasy pole, but his talents were finally being recognised. |
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Sure, you may be a whiz at spag bol, but aren't you a bit bored with the same old same old? |
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Waugh began at Heatherley's in late September 1924, but became bored with the routine and quickly abandoned his course. |
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He obstinately made his motion at every meeting, even though no one else ever supported it and everyone else was bored with it. |
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We LPBs are truly bored with wall humping High Ping Whiners. I would like nothing more than to have someone who can kill me. |
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Millionaire Mariah has confessed she's bored with city slicker types after her failed marriage to businessman Tommy Mottola. |
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At one moment in the movie we hear him say that he had lost faith in the Manichaeans, as if he had simply become bored with them. |
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Many patrons were probably getting bored with some of Olive Garden's other appetizers, like Fried Zucchini, Fried Mozzarella, and Calamari. |
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Every now and then a word gets bored with its usual beat, and begins to attach itself to sentences in an orgy of unnecessariness. |
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He stayed close to the theatre producer, who he married two years ago, while their dog Dolly trotted ahead looking a bit bored with all their smooching. |
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Struggling to compete with the volume of sound generated by screaming fans, the band had grown increasingly bored with the routine of performing live. |
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