technically it could be tired or tiring.
The present form of "tired" is "tire."
The past participle is been. The word "is" is the present tense, third person singular of the verb "to be." Present tense: he is tired Present perfect tense: he has been tired
The feminine form of "tired" in French is "fatiguΓ©e."
The present perfect form of "present" is "have/has presented."
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."
The present tense form of "were" is "are."
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.
Are is the present tense plural form of be verb. am / is / are I am tired and hungry. He is tired and hungry. They are tired and hungry.
Tired is an adjective.
am or is. I am hungry -- I was hungry She is tired -- She was tired
If you mean Present Continuous Tense here is what it is-We use the Present Continuous Tense to talk about activities happening now..ExamplesThe kids are watching TV. I am sitting down, because I am tired
more tired
more tired, most tired
more 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.
The past participle is been. The word "is" is the present tense, third person singular of the verb "to be." Present tense: he is tired Present perfect tense: he has been tired
No. too - adverb tired - adjective
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.