How to Use drudgery in a Sentence
drudgery
noun- He hated the drudgery of his job.
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Star, 31, is too busy to deal with the drudgery of keeping pets.
— Helin Jung, Cosmopolitan, 7 Sep. 2017 -
Borlaug grew up in Iowa, schooled in the drudgery of farm life.
— BostonGlobe.com, 27 Apr. 2018 -
But the message is the same: The visits will be drudgery, but so what?
— Jay Mathews, Washington Post, 22 Apr. 2018 -
Cars the likes of the TF weren't built for interstate drudgery.
— Brendan McAleer, Car and Driver, 11 Mar. 2023 -
The filmmakers show us the soul-killing drudgery of the workers’ lives.
— Peter Rainer, The Christian Science Monitor, 10 Aug. 2023 -
A lot of knowledge work is drudgery, like email triage.
— WIRED, 13 June 2023 -
Hold on to that sense of hope when day-to-day drudgery threatens to grind you down.
— Jennifer Culp, Them, 9 Aug. 2024 -
The window over the sink let in the smell of summer grass and eased the drudgery of dishwashing.
— Karen Brown, The Atlantic, 31 Aug. 2021 -
Who has been such a folk hero of workaday boredom and 9 to 5 drudgery?
— Taffy Brodesser-Akner, miamiherald, 8 Feb. 2018 -
The usual Ubisoft drudgery, where icons on maps become weights on the brain, was gone.
— Tauriq Moosa, The Verge, 31 Aug. 2024 -
Turn the drudgery of riding the train into a genuine thrill ride.
— Stephanie Walden, USA TODAY, 6 Sep. 2017 -
Every chore inside the home and outside on the farm was drudgery.
— Dave Lieber, Dallas News, 28 May 2021 -
It is also feared that teenagers would rebel against such drudgery.
— Washington Post, 17 Oct. 2021 -
The dark age ideas of work as drudgery and sweat equity no longer hold up.
— Bryan Robinson, Forbes, 10 Nov. 2022 -
But there is one hack that can save you from all that drudgery: time travel.
— Swapna Krishna, Wired, 21 Apr. 2021 -
The work of the people who perform the drudgery of digging in the dirt to find fossils is priceless.
— Smithsonian Magazine, Smithsonian Magazine, 23 Sep. 2022 -
The latter was a mix of drudgery and delight; the former much more solid fun.
— Forrest Brown, CNN, 23 July 2024 -
There is no hint that any of this routine has become drudgery.
— Victoria Pope, Smithsonian, 23 Jan. 2017 -
The sheer drudgery of the race may stem from the inevitable decline in the city’s tabloid newspaper culture.
— Walter Shapiro, The New Republic, 28 May 2021 -
Hundreds of health systems around the country are using these tools in hopes the AI can lift them out of the drudgery.
— Brittany Trang, STAT, 28 Mar. 2023 -
Where there’s a will (to avoid the drudgery of laundry day), there’s absolutely a way.
— Jessica Toscano, SELF, 23 Feb. 2019 -
Weah’s first league goal was the result of unusual drudgery.
— Ronald Blum, The Seattle Times, 4 Sep. 2018 -
But her grand idea to end the drudgeries of housework never took hold, and by 2002, the cost of running the house had bled her savings dry.
— Ben Panko, Smithsonian, 20 July 2017 -
Sure, parenting involves a lot of drudgery and busy-work.
— Elissa Strauss, CNN, 22 Oct. 2019 -
In other words, a day at the office suddenly feels less like drudgery and more like a day out.
— Jane Black, WSJ, 12 Aug. 2021 -
But videos of their escapades became a welcome escape from the drudgery of the working world.
— New York Times, 23 June 2021 -
And somewhere between those two poles is where the artist lives: magic and drudgery, day after day, for all the lucky years of our lives.
— New York Times, 21 Apr. 2022 -
But in this context, the robots are simply taking some of the drudgery away from humans.
— John Timmer, Ars Technica, 18 July 2018 -
For her, the tent became an escape from the drudgery and isolation of working the overnight shift at Amazon.
— Greg Jaffe, Washington Post, 12 June 2022
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'drudgery.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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