No.
Yes, the word 'tired' is the past participle, past tense of the verb 'to tire', a word for the act of tiring.Jack was tired by a morning of track practice.The past participle of the verb is also an adjective; for example a tired baby.
A homophone for the word "tired" is "tired" – there are no other homophones for this word.
The word "tired" is an adjective.
tired?
The word "looks" can function as both a linking verb and an action verb. As a linking verb, it connects the subject to a subject complement (e.g., "She looks tired"). As an action verb, it describes the physical act of directing your gaze or attention towards something (e.g., "He looks at the painting").
more tired
For a verb to be a linking verb, the direct object of the verb will be another word for or another form of the subject of the verb. A linking verb acts as an equals sign; 'Mary is my sister.' (Mary=sister); or 'Mary's feet got wet.' (feet->wet). Examples: The teacher appeared tired. (teacher=tired) The teacher appeared in the doorway. (not a linking verb)
No, it is not. The word "are" is the second person or plural form, present tense, of the verb "to be." e.g. I am tired. We are tired. You are tired. He is tired. They are tired.
The word "look" can function as both an action verb and a linking verb. As an action verb, it describes the physical act of directing your eyes towards something. As a linking verb, it can describe someone's appearance or state of being, such as "She looks tired."
hello, we use the phrases ; dead - beat , or whacked out to describe being tired
The word tired is the past tense of the verb to tire. The noun form is the gerund, tiring.The word tired is also an adjective The noun form is tiredness.
The homophone for the word tired is "tired" itself. Homophones are words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have different meanings.