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'excruciatingly boring' is correct and usable in written English.
You can use it to describe something that is exceptionally dull or uninteresting. For example, "The movie was excruciatingly boring and I fell asleep halfway through."
Exact(39)
I can't do it; it's excruciatingly boring.
At times, he was terrifying to listen to, at others excruciatingly boring.
In trying so hard to be enthralling, they end up excruciatingly boring.
There's a lot of stuff on the screen, and some of it is excruciatingly boring.
So she ended up doing "excruciatingly boring" grunt work two days a week.
A 1966 musical was pulled during previews when the producer David Merrick decided it was "excruciatingly boring".
Similar(19)
And this of course is why the current election campaign strikes most Britons as so excruciatingly, agonizingly boring.
And Mr. Walters, unlike almost everyone else in the room, pronounced himself "excruciatingly bored" with the election that never ends.
An important lesson that Antarctica can impart on a Mars expedition is this: even scientists on important missions can get excruciatingly bored.
"I was so excruciatingly bored after college — it was like going home to Pittsburgh to get into the steel industry, then realizing that you hate steel," he says.
"I was so excruciatingly bored after college it was like going home to Pittsburgh to get into the steel industry, then realizing that you hate steel," he says.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com