Yes
I am a little tired.
Yes, A bike has 2 tires, so if it is 2 tired to stand, it makes a pun. ______________ Yes, it is a compound pun. Here is an editorial comment. "The bike is two tired to stand" is ok, but the richness of the pun is diluted because the syntax of "is two tired to stand" is strained; the sentence really calls for "too tired". I realize that the play on too and two is the point. How is this as an alternate? Can your bike stand? No, my bike can't stand; it's two-tired. "It's two-tired" maintains the correct syntax without correction, and still packs the punch of the compound pun.
No, it is not a complete sentence.
No. There are a lot of things wrong with this sentence.Her is a possessive pronoun not a subject pronoun. The correct pronoun is she.would of been should be would have beenworkin'n playin' should be working and playingto should be tootwo should be to2 should be toSo the sentence should be:She would have been too tired to continue working and playing to notice anything wrong.But this doesn't really make sense anyway.This is betterShe would have been too tired to continue working and playing or notice anything wrong.or thisShe would have been too tired to continue working and playing.or thisShe would have been too tired to notice anything wrong.
Only if there is no semicolon between "tired" and "you".
ran tired
The correct sentence would be... sherry needs a new brake on her motorcycle before she'll be able to race.
In the sentence "You are extremely tired," the word "tired" is an adjective describing the state of being of the subject "you."
We were very tired after we had made 5 laps of the pitch.
The verb is "get" which is a linking verb to the adjective tired.
In "he said that he was tired," the word 'that' is a subordinating conjunction that introduces a noun clause ('that he was tired'). It functions as a connector between the main clause ("he said") and the subordinate clause ("he was tired").
tired and or worn out