Yes, it is a verb, or at least a type of verb. Experienced is a linking verb.
A verb is an action word. 'He' is a pronoun. There are no verb variations for 'he'.
The verb
Got is an irregular verb. It is the past tense verb of "get".
There is no verb for greedily.
The noun forms for the adjective tedious tediousness and tedium.The is no verb form for tedious; the adverb tediouslymodifies a verb as done in a tedious manner.
Yes, the word 'going' is a gerund, the present participle of the verb to 'go' that also functions as a noun in a sentence.example: The going was slow and tedious in the blizzard.
Cleanup is a noun -- The cleanup, after the flood, was long and tedious. Clean up is a verb -- I will clean up the back yard next.
Waxing the car is a tedious task.
The word tedious has three syllables.
You could use it in the sense of to light e.g. To light the dim hallway with ease would be much more tedious than to merely set it alight. :)
Because the teacher droned on and on, his students found listening to be tedious. Answering such questions may be tedious to some people, but not to me. The sailors found life on a cargo ship to be tedious and boring.
Cleaning the grooves in the tile was tedious work. My teacher gave me the tedious job of looking for every comma in my essay.
It is dialect spelling of the word tedious, as you suspected.
Tedious has three syllables: te-di-ous
The word discipline is a noun as well as a verb; for example: Noun: Athletes learn discipline to complete tedious training routines. Noun: He runs his business with strict military discipline. Verb: If students can discipline themselves, they can complete their work quickly. The noun forms for the verb to discipline are discipliner, one who disciplines; and the gerund, disciplining.
An antonym for tedious (dull, repetitive, boring) could be exciting, challenging, interesting, or fascinating.