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Yet he chronicles his travels with a wearying feather-light jocularity, prizing one-liners over lucid analysis.
ECONOMIST: The secret of happiness
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Those same older Tories loathe the daily wearying grind of the age of austerity and coalition compromise.
BBC: Why gay marriage has exposed Conservative divisions
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And how weird, wearying, and warlike can that world get before our love for it, too, will crack?
FORBES: Millennials, Hipsters, And Life After Financial Melancholy
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Nothing is more wearying, for readers whose tastes have been formed by the realist novel, than the Elder Edda.
NEWYORKER: The Dragon��s Egg
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If the West is wearying of its Afghan adventure, it is hardly surprising.
ECONOMIST: The war in Afghanistan
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The movie is too long, and often wearying to watch, taking its visual cues from the unappeasable restlessness of the heroine.
NEWYORKER: Rachel Getting Married
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Extending that principle to the rest of the world of policy favors Romney, insofar as Americans are wearying of the historic.
FORBES: Are You More Historic Than You Were Four Years Ago?
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But after a while, this knee-jerk condescension toward neo-nominalists (parents with an obsessive need to give their children weird or unusual names) becomes wearying.
WSJ: Go Ahead and Name Her Rhiannon: Joe Queenan on Baby Names | Moving Targets
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And Russell told any cricketers who are feeling the wearying effects of their commitment to T20 cricket to knuckle down to the busy schedule.
BBC: Players 'do not enjoy' Twenty20
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Companies outside the tech sector are coming aboard, too, seeing online programming puzzles as a welcome shortcut to the wearying rituals of traditional technical recruiting.
FORBES: In Silicon Valley Talent War, Zombie Math Rules
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With Mr Koizumi visibly wearying, the fight is swinging against him.
ECONOMIST: Once again, Japan's bureaucrats are under attack
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At times, the casual, high-concept banter can be wearying, but what makes the proceedings more than an airy, intellectual stunt is the final filmed obstruction.
NEWYORKER: The Five Obstructions
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That said, this book becomes a bit wearying after a while.
ECONOMIST: Cutting down on errors