Join me in a little fun .
Which of the following three sentences would you be most likely to say or type?

a) I am bored with this?
b) I am bored by this?
c) I am bored of this?

All three are perfectly correct, I am interested in usage.
I have a hunch about which way the result will go. But am I right or wrong?

Give it a and let's find out.

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@stueytheround

While I'm *far* too lazy to pull any books off my shelves or consult past writings to check, I'd have to go with the following:

If it is an object or activity, A/B (e.g., "I'm bored with this Rubik's cube."; "I'm bored by football.").

I would tend to use C more activity-exclusive ("I'm bored of this game.").

That's what seems right to my eyes & ears, and that's how I would use them.

Frankly...I am seldom if ever truly bored, so don't often say it ;)


@stueytheround

If anyone can provide language rule/precedent, I'd be keen to know; I am not aware of it from any canonical works (e.g., MLA, Strunk & White, LB, etc).

That said, I'm widely due for another reread of S&W. My overutilization of needless words is not just awful: it's *gawd* awful ;)

(Yes, that was deliberate) :D

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