No; it means tiresome, weary, burdensome.
Waxing the car is a tedious task.
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.
'Tiresome' The Immortal Bard (Shakespeare) was right when he penned the lines ' If it were to sport all day, it would be as tedious as to work'. 'Sport' in Shakespearean terms means to do nothing, relax. NOT athletic sports.
It is dialect spelling of the word tedious, as you suspected.
An antonym for tedious (dull, repetitive, boring) could be exciting, challenging, interesting, or fascinating.
No it means if something is tedious then it is extremely boring, a trial to get through, ect. Eg. Twilight
tedious;; boring, annoying.
A tedious moralizing lecture or admonition.
· tedious
A tedious or unpleasant person.
Tedious means repetitive, tiresome, boring, brain-numbing.Tiresome, if something takes a long time or is boring - or both.
The suffix for tedious is -ous.
It would mean it was a boring, kind of tedious and laborious task.
Waxing the car is a tedious task.
Tedious has three syllables: te-di-ous
predictable, tedious, tiresome, run-of-the-mill, humdrum, unimaginative, work
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.