tritest
insipid
They are hackneyed, dull, worn out, ordinary and commonplace
uninventive, unoriginal, hackneyed, trite, dull
drab
It has been given as stemming from "hack" "a bad writer". I would like to consider it as coming from HACKNEY, the London Borough. Since Hackney cabs originated there and all were one shape, size and colour, the term "hackneyed" was coined to mean commonplace, dull, boring, even "overused". Probably just my wishful thinking.
the opposite of dull is sharp. like "the dull knife and the sharp knife."=dull means boring and not fun.=
4Ache?5Throb?Drone?Any other clues?
Dull.
Lead is a metal with dull appearance. It means "yes"! Was this answer helpful?
commonplace or dull
Thud.
dull