rigmarole
noun
rig·ma·role
ˈri-gə-mə-ˌrōl
ˈrig-mə-
variants
or less commonly rigamarole
plural rigmaroles also rigamaroles
1
: something (such as a procedure or an explanation) that is long, complicated, and tedious
I went to my insurers and started the usual rigmarole.—Cliff Ballinger
The whole rigmarole of getting a visa didn't even exist until recent decades.—Mary Sanchez
Why the hold-up? There's still a whole bunch of legal rigamarole to work out …—Tristan Hopper
We went through the usual social rigmaroles, drinking something white and sharp.—Tim Parks
Patients can report product problems to a helpline but if they have other questions, it can be a rigmarole just to find the right regulator.—Laura Hancock
We know now … the real reason McDonald's ice cream machines always seem to be broken is because they're not—they just take four hours and an 11-step process to clean. This rigmarole is often what's actually preventing McDonald's employees from serving up your hot fudge sundae.—Megan Scott
Mrs. Buttler isn't a constant visitor. She arrives irregularly, with some long rigmarole of complaint, some urgent awful news.—Alice Munro
2
dated
: confused or meaningless talk
It is as if they had been named by the child's rigmarole …—Henry David Thoreau
… Fred ended his rigmarole, in which he had jumbled together pell-mell nautical phrases and facts out of one of his favorite books.—Louisa May Alcott
Love words? Need even more definitions?
Merriam-Webster unabridged
Share