No.
too - adverb
tired - adjective
Seems is the verb. To be tired is a verbal phrase, a verb form functioning as another part of speech in this sentence.
"Too tired." Example: "I am too tired to go for a walk."
The voice of the verb in the sentence "By the end of the day, the children were tired" is passive. The subject "the children" is being acted upon by the verb "were tired" rather than performing the action themselves.
Yes, "tired" is the past participle of the verb "to tire." It is used to form perfect tenses such as "I have tired of this situation."
Be verbs have singular form Be verbs - am / is I am tired. He is tired too. The -s form of the verb is used only in present tense with third person pronouns or noun phrases which are singular. singular pronoun - He likes chocolate. - add -s to verb like. singular noun subject - The dog likes meat. - add -s to verb.
No. too - adverb tired - adjective
Tiring is one verb. "He was tiring the child out so he will sleep".Tired is also another verb. "We tired them out with a long walk".Exhaust can be one too. "We exhaust them all".
The verb is "get" which is a linking verb to the adjective tired.
Depends on the context. If its something like, "she tired me" then its a verb. If its something like, "I am tired" then its an adjective. Hope this helps...Tired is not a verb it is an adjective.The verb is tire. The sentence should be she tires me.The past tense of the verb "tire" is "tired".
Seems is the verb. To be tired is a verbal phrase, a verb form functioning as another part of speech in this sentence.
Yes, the word tired can be a predicate nominative when it 'renames' the subject. Predicate nominatives follow a 'linking' verb. Examples: Mary is tired. (Mary = tired) Mary became tired. (Mary > tired) They were tired. (They = tired) When used with a non-linking verb, tired is not a predicate nominative. Examples: That dog is a tired old thing. (tired is an adjective modifying the object or the sentence) The tired kids were ready for a nap. (tired is an adjective modifying the subject of the sentence)
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.
Tired is an adjective in this case.It can also be a verb (the past tense of the verb "tire")
"Too tired." Example: "I am too tired to go for a walk."
The word 'tired' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to tire. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The noun form of the verb to tire is the gerund, tiring.The noun form of the adjective tired is tiredness.
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.
It can be an adjective, and it can also be a verb. You have a tired look on your face. That was a tired joke. He was tired That class exercise tired me. The tired joke and the tired look are adjectives, specifically they are past participles modifying nouns. The last one is an intransitive verb.