Fatique- to tire from physical or mental exhaustion is derived from the Latin word fatīgāre, and later the French word 'fatiguer.' Sample synonyms would be: Enervate, tire, debilitate, exhausted
The word responsibiliy comes from the Latin word fart
It came from the Latin word mentula...
It comes from the Greek word lógos.
From Aztlán (White Land), an allusion to their origins, probably in Northern Mexico.
The English word is taken from the French "fatigue" which in term comes from the latin fatigare literally 'to tire'. V.
No. 'Fatigue' is a noun as well as a verb. 'I was fatigued.' 'I was experiencing fatigue.' 'I was overcome by fatigue.'
Structural fatigue caused the wing to come off during flight.
exhaustion
The Tagalog word for fatigue is "pagod."
Fatique- to tire from physical or mental exhaustion is derived from the Latin word fatīgāre, and later the French word 'fatiguer.' Sample synonyms would be: Enervate, tire, debilitate, exhausted
tire
2
Well with the amount of symptoms that come with a blocked carotid artery, it can result in fatigue.
The word "fatigue" means "mental or physical exhaustion: extreme tiredness or weariness resulting from physical or mental activity." Used in a sentence: He ran for so long that he almost fainted from fatigue.
No, the word 'fatigued' is a verb, the past participle, past tense of the verb to fatigue. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The word 'fatigue' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'fatigue' is an abstract noun as a word for mental or emotional tiredness resulting from worry or excessive work.The noun 'fatigue' is a concrete noun as a word for:physical tiredness resulting from mental or physical stress;weakness in a material caused by repeated stress;the uniform worn by members of the armed forces for physical labor.
I am very fatigue after being at the beach all day, it made me very tired.