Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Showing results for dry-as-dust. Search instead for dryasdust.
Synonyms

dry-as-dust

American  
[drahy-uhz-duhst] / ˈdraɪ əzˈdʌst /
Or dryasdust

adjective

  1. dull and boring.

    a dry-as-dust biography.


dry as dust Idioms  
  1. Dull, boring, as in This text is dry as dust; it's putting me to sleep. [c. 1500]


Etymology

Origin of dry-as-dust

1870–75; after Dr. Dryasdust, a fictitious pedant satirized in the prefaces of Sir Walter Scott's novels

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

Yesterday, the decision emerged in a dry-as-dust news release at the dog end of the political day.

From BBC • Dec. 8, 2022

Hughes has infused new life into dry-as-dust facts to produce a learned work that is brazenly, impudently vivacious.

From Washington Post • Mar. 7, 2018

Even that old windbag Polonius, played by Robert Joy, is less a bombastic grandstander than a dry-as-dust martinet.

From New York Times • Jan. 23, 2018

"I don't know if it's because your bus is too comfortable or the weather isn't to your liking," said the dry-as-dust Pescheux, "but, Team Sky, your riders didn't sign on this morning."

From The Guardian • Jul. 24, 2010

Merely a name to a few dry-as-dust pedants.

From The Unveiling of Lhasa by Candler, Edmund