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"The required readings for my European history class are so jejune, I almost fall asleep while studying."
"It's a bit jejune and predictable to host a brunch for the fifth year in a row, don't you think?"
"After the jejune first novel, her book of essays is quite sophisticated."
Latin, early 17th century
The adjective "jejune" comes from the Latin "jejunus," meaning "fasting, barren." When it entered English in the early 17th century, the original sense was "without food," but the usage quickly shifted to ...
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