In that sentence, indigent is a noun.
In the sentence "You are extremely tired," the word "tired" is an adjective describing the state of being of the subject "you."
Adjective
Seems is the verb. To be tired is a verbal phrase, a verb form functioning as another part of speech in this sentence.
In "he said that he was tired," the word 'that' is a subordinating conjunction that introduces a noun clause ('that he was tired'). It functions as a connector between the main clause ("he said") and the subordinate clause ("he was tired").
Jacopo reqested him to send them in his car well i think direct is when you speak directly to the person and in direct is when someone just hears
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".
To turn reported speech into a question, begin by identifying the original statement and its tense. Shift the tense appropriately to match the context of the question, and restructure the sentence to form an interrogative format. For example, if the reported speech is "He said that he was tired," you can convert it to a question by asking, "Did he say that he was tired?"
The word "tired" is an adjective.
Adjective.
Only if there is no semicolon between "tired" and "you".
ran tired
I am a little tired.