Attire!
There tired?
They're tired?
the difference is this... being dressed- when you have clothes on being dressed up- when you have fancy clothes on
The well-dressed man is well dressed and the dog is tired.
They both are tired
They both are tired
the lady wears a skirt and the dog pants
The chief difference between kouros and kore is that the kouros (male) were always nude and the kore (female) were always dressed.
A theme is a topic; as in the theme of a party could be Elvis, so everyone comes dressed as Elvis. Them means those things, or those people.
The difference is in register. "The children went upstairs to dress." "The children went upstairs to get dressed." The first sentence is very formal, vaguely archaic, and a bit elevated. The second sentence is more general and everyday in sound. Both are perfectly correct grammatically, but they are different in register.
No difference in meaning whatsoever. " Got dressed " is more informal and is used in conversation amongst friends, or informal writing e.g. e-mails, in relaxed North American English. " Dressed " would be preferred in formal writing and public speaking e.g. school assignments, articles, university lectures and serious discussions. Clearly, any situation in which the listener or reader might make a judgment as to the education level of the writer or speaker, would determine whether or not to use the simple verb form as opposed to the much more casual " got " form.
dressed to the nines dressed to the nines dressed to the nines ===== dressed to the hilt dressed to kill
The lady wears skirts and the dog pants!!! this is not the answer a lady has skin and a tired old dog has pups
Advertising. If raised on the same pasture, fattened on the same grains, and dressed out in the same packing plant, you would not be able to tell the difference between Angus and Hereford beef.