A man jumped into the river to save her from drowning. drown (verb) = die by being under the water and unable to breathe: ‘Help him! He’s drowning!’ ‘The lifeguard got to him too late. He had already drowned.’ ‘She keeps away from the water because she’s afraid of drowning.’ drunken The man was obviously drunken.
The man was obviously drunk. One of the two drunken men shouted at me.
One of the two drunks shouted at me. Drunken is rarely used to describe a person. It usually describes an action or event: ‘drunken driving’, ‘drunken laughter’, ‘a drunken brawl’, ‘a drunken orgy’. The exception is ‘drunken drivers’ (usually drunk drivers in AmE). Drunken always comes before a noun. To describe a person, use drunk (NOT drunken): ‘I think he wanted to get us all drunk.’ ‘One of the students was always getting drunk.’ Drunk is not used before a noun. When you mean ‘a person who is drunk’, use a drunk: ‘A couple of drunks were causing a disturbance.’ dull If I did the same thing every day, I would be dull.
If I did the same thing every day, I would be bored. It was such a dull job that I decided to leave.
It was such a boring job that I decided to leave. When dull is used to describe a person, it means ‘slow to learn or understand’: ‘He was one of the dullest students I’d ever taught.’ Both dull and boring can mean ‘uninteresting’ but in this sense