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42 Sentences With "got bored of"

How to use got bored of in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "got bored of" and check conjugation/comparative form for "got bored of". Mastering all the usages of "got bored of" from sentence examples published by news publications.

The tram was shut down after people reportedly got bored of the attraction.
Socci used to work as a clinical psychotherapist before she got bored of sitting in an office.
When he finally got bored of collecting a paycheck for the work of his computer algorithm, Steve quit.
"Swag so sick to injury reserve me," he adds, before eventually trailing off like he got bored of rapping.
When my real life friends got bored of me talking about how cool Avril Lavigne was, I turned to forums.
George had invented Banking the previous summer, when his friends got bored of moralizing, strategically restrictive games like Mansion of Happiness.
"I've written hundreds of songs, and I got bored of saying things the same way," he told Rolling Stone in 1997.
Putting down roots was the partial impetus for a second trip; he got bored of running the same trails in his neighborhood.
If you got bored of being told when to stand, Apple is now reminding Apple Watch owners to breathe with watchOS 3.
You've been writing these films and characters for more than a decade, and you never got bored of them — McFEELY Or fired.
" When others spout complex theories about why the Americans have ceased their bombing raids, he thinks: "Maybe they got bored of bombing us?
"Richard may have got bored of my notes, but I had total recall of what I did and what I did misguidedly," Mr. Hopkins said.
We got bored of doing the alternative rock thing and we wanted to change it up and make a song that feels dirty to listen to.
Like I said about people getting bored of the major label sellout conversation, people just got bored of everything being offensive so they decided nothing could be.
We didn't love it, so we changed over to one of those 1970s-looking classics with soft focus and pubic hair but soon got bored of that, too.
While Trixie fears she's an inadequate liar, Bob prides herself in her crock-of-shit-conjuring capabilities—so much so that Trixie implies Bob eventually got bored of it.
At 72, Wynnifred Franklin (great name, especially for a Philadelphian; her late husband's name was Benjamin Franklin!) got bored of sitting around in retirement and decided to Get This Bread.
"There was a time where you could go Passing Clouds and if you got bored of Central African music, there'd be dubstep waiting for you at Plastic People," Idehen says.
Also, Fergus' (Romann Berrux) uncooperative donkey and a silly monkey, all of whom prove that this show would make an excellent comedy if we ever got bored of all that epic romance and war.
I never got bored of getting to know these characters while taking in the gorgeous scenery: snowy white fields or wide open plains, clear blue skies or dark ones lighting up with crackles of lighting.
He previously "believed" that there were millions of cases of voter fraud during the election—an allegation that he dropped, possibly because he got bored of it—and that Russia wasn't behind the hacking of the Democratic National Committee.
With that in mind, making your phone's basic user interface work just like the iPhone — particularly in a country with notoriously lax IP laws, and in a world that got bored of Apple and Samsung's legal disputes years ago — makes a certain degree of sense.
IN THE 1970s, when those behind America's manned space programme were trying to keep it alive as people got bored of moon landings, one fantasy was that there were products which might be made easily in space that were hard to create on Earth—metal foams, for example.
A Ritchie source tells PEOPLE the exes' 15-year-old son Rocco got bored of touring with his mom, "an old-school parent," late last year and – in an act of rebellion – decided to live with his more laidback dad, who splits his time between London and his Ashcombe estate, where Rocco likes to run around with a Nerf gun.
I've been a caravanner for many years and I've never got bored of it.
As Gordon was about to reach adolescence, he "got bored" of racing regularly. With support from his parents, Gordon began practicing waterskiing at age twelve. Gordon's stepfather enrolled him in professional ski schools, and by age thirteen, coaches from California State University, Sacramento scouted him. Gordon learned how to slalom but struggled with jumping.
Scott began to have his one-night stands with sixteen-year-old Steph Dean, but soon got bored of her and dumped her. His attentions grew closer to Izzy Cornwell, and he made several attempts to seduce her. At one time it went too far. Scott would not let go of Izzy and Beth drove towards Scott and knocked him down whilst driving.
Goopy Gyne and Bagha Byne ruled the kingdom of Shundi and got bored of enjoying the royal luxuries. They want to get back to the days of adventure they had enjoyed all their lives, but age comes in the way. They leave the kingdom in search of new experiences. Finally, they reach Anandapur and win the king's heart with their musical abilities and powers.
Dave Smith is a bookmaker and small-town businessman played by actor Reginald Marsh on a recurring basis between 1962 and 1976. Dave is introduced as owner of the local bookies when he appears for two episodes in September 1962. Dave is immediately interested in Elsie Tanner and he invites her to go on holiday with him. Elsie returns a couple of weeks later, having got bored of Dave's company.
Then Fern and her boyfriend Monty arrive. Fern takes over the household and bullies the family, making Christie her slave as revenge for the constant disapproval of Christie's parents. She has no interest in why Christie and Jefferson are hiding out at The Meadows, assuming that Christie finally got bored of being a good girl and ran away. When Christie tells Fern about her rape, Fern's response is that Christie must have seduced him.
" In September 2011, Plan B announced that The Ballad of Belmarsh had been put on hold in order to work on his then-upcoming film Ill Manors (2012). In April 2018, Plan B stated that the project never came to fruition because he got bored of the Strickland Banks character: "It's one of those lost albums. I'd shot Ill Manors and the label wasn't taking the film seriously. I'd written most of it before I put out ...Strickland Banks.
G. M. Durrani had become spiritually inclined because of which he slowly left the industry. In an interview with Ameen Sayani in 1978, he said that he got bored of the materialistic world (like bungalow, motors, cars and other luxurious items) of Bollywood Bombay Film Industry and started avoiding the film career and film personalities. He started keeping a beard so nobody would recognise him. He sold his all luxurious items and started giving away money from the bank to various Faqirs.
In July 2008, the working title of the album was confirmed as Stuck on the Naughty Step. On 7 October at the BMI Awards, Allen announced that the album title had been changed to It's Not Me, It's You, due to the fact that she "lived with [the original title] for too long" and got bored of it. On 29 October, Allen announced the album would be released in the United States on 10 February 2009. The track listings were also released.
All the fun that Basil had allowed was now banned by King Egor, and his subjects barely left their homes. Members of parliament woke up to guards sending them to the dungeons and children of peasants were assigned to work for the monarchy. Egor loved being king because everyone automatically became a yes man but he soon got bored of crying peasants. He went back to Alter for more tips and the reflection scolds him for giving up before it is eaten by the pike.
After working as a software engineer for Google, she got bored of working for large companies, and joined a small venture capital- funded startup company as the Vice President (VP) of engineering before being awarded a Master of Business Administration (MBA) degree from the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. McDowell subsequently founded her own business, CareerCup.com, which helps people prepare for interviews at tech companies. First published in 2008, her book Cracking the Coding Interview provides guidance on technical job interviews, and includes solutions to example coding interview questions.
Tratt showed an interest in motorsport from when he was a youngster, at the age of just 10 years, via the Seton family. He would jump in the truck with Barry Seton, Russell and Mark Skaife and it was that which gave him his “first taste” for the sport. As he grew older, Tratt was given the opportunity to build a Porsche. He explains: “Once you’ve raced anything and racing is in your system it’s hard not to do it, so after a while I got bored of just helping out.
Their true faces could not be revealed until they gained more Twitter followers than Bish manager Watanabe Junnosuke. However, Watanabe, got bored of waiting and lowered the number to 5000 followers for both members, and their faces were revealed later that week. On 14 August 2015, Bish revealed the music video for their first single, the Celtic metal song "OTNK", featuring the new members. On 2 October 2015 it was announced that Bish would release a second album with the title Full Metal Jacket. This was later changed to Fake Metal Jacket, and was released on 20 January 2016.
Koko, a female gorilla, was trained to use a form of American Sign Language. It has been claimed that she once tore a steel sink out of its moorings and when her handlers confronted her, Koko signed "cat did it" and pointed at her innocent pet kitten. Nim Chimpsky was a common chimpanzee also trained in American Sign Language. In a documentary about the chimp ("Project Nim") trainers claimed that when Nim got bored of learning to sign words she would sign 'dirty' indicating she wanted to go to the toilet, which caused the trainer to stop the lesson.
City of the Damned is a Judge Dredd story which was published in British comic 2000 AD in issues 393–406 (1984–1985). It was written by John Wagner and Alan Grant and illustrated by Steve Dillon, Ian Gibson, Ron Smith and Kim Raymond. It was the first Judge Dredd story to feature time travel. Originally planned to last for at least twenty episodes, like earlier stories "The Judge Child" and "The Apocalypse War", the writers got bored of writing it and wrapped it up early at only 14 episodes because they did not like time travel stories.
Jack and Liz arguing like this is standard for 30 Rock, and I got bored of their story rather quickly." Further in his recap, Forcella said that the ending scene, with Jeffrey explaining all of the things Jack and Liz have done together as close friends, "was almost as if they expected us to predict one of them was going to think it was something more than a friendship, and then flip it on the audience." Kelsea Stahler of the New York Post noted that when it was revealed that Jack accidentally married Liz that it "fell a little flat", reasoning "I mean, Jack accidentally married [Liz], this scene could have reached so many levels of insanity, but instead they settled for Jonathan's (Maulik Pancholy) piercing squeal before moving onto the rest of the show." Johnny Firecloud of CraveOnline did not enjoy the Jenna, Danny, and Kenneth plot explaining that it unfolded "very strangely, and eventually saps a good deal of energy out of the show.
When a wealthy man made his fortune convincing the world that bad is good and good is bad, he got bored of his success, and wanted to have some fun with his fortune; he created a huge theme park as a slice of life look at Hell, called Underworld: the Theme Park. Disguised as the devil and calling himself "the Boss", he sunk to new lows in deviant behaviour, but it wasn't enough; so he invited a nice family to live in Underworld, for the sole purpose of torturing them. But when his skeletal right hand man, Kevin directed the Baskervilles his way, he may have bitten off more than he can chew. The show is almost a mirror image of The Munsters, where instead of a family of monsters trying to live in a human suburb, it's a human family trying to fit in a demonic city, where all the rules are the opposite of what they were back home.
" He notes it is rare that press companies from one side of the political divide will cover the same subject matter as the other. The book chronicles Taibbi's changing assessments of Trump's likelihood to win the 2016 election for president. In August 2015, he criticizes the poor slate of candidates for the Republican nomination for president, calling them the "GOP clown car". Taibbi begins to change his views after personally visiting speeches by Trump at campaign stops in the beginning portion of 2016. In an election dispatch from September 2016, Taibbi writes, "I still don’t think Trump really has a chance, but we’re sure headed towards a scary ending." In October, he states, "Trump can’t win. Our national experiment can’t end because one ageing narcissist got bored of sex and food. Not even America deserves that." The book castigates Republican tactics of engaging in culture wars, writing they are, "taking advantage of the fact that their voters didn’t know the difference between an elitist and the actual elite, between a snob and an oligarch.

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