hello, we use the phrases ;
dead - beat ,
or
whacked out
to describe being tired
A homophone for the word "tired" is "tired" – there are no other homophones for this word.
The homophone for the word tired is "tired" itself. Homophones are words that sound the same but are spelled differently and have different meanings.
I was tired and wanted to go home.
The tired child fell into a deep slumber.
"Disregard what I just said, I'm tired and not thinking straight."
tired?
I would abbreviate the word house as Ho. as in Somerset Ho.
more tired
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 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 " living room , or the lounge
Tired contains two syllables.
it is just as it sounds..."over-tired" so you are not just tired.......your over tired!
No.
The word tired is an adjective, and has no plural. Only nouns have plurals.The verb form tired (I tired of it, he tired of the game) is the past tense of to tire.
Somerset, England.
The address of the Somerset Historical Center is: 10649 Somerset Pike, Somerset, PA 15501-7357