Jessica wants to rest. She is fatigued. She is the opposite of alert and awake.
Only if there is no semicolon between "tired" and "you".
I am a little tired.
In the sentence "Your feet are tired", the simple subject is "feet": Note that "feet" is the only noun in the sentence, and the only pronoun, "your", is in its possessive case, not suitable for a sentence subject.
answer is you
In the sentence "By midnight you were all tired," the preposition is "by." It indicates a point in time before which the action or state of being (in this case, being tired) occurs.
Only if there is no semicolon between "tired" and "you".
ran tired
In the sentence "You are extremely tired," the word "tired" is an adjective describing the state of being of the subject "you."
I am a little tired.
The verb is "get" which is a linking verb to the adjective tired.
We were very tired after we had made 5 laps of the pitch.
tired and or worn out
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").
Seems is the verb. To be tired is a verbal phrase, a verb form functioning as another part of speech in this sentence.
my name is jessica.
I am a monastery clergy that is tired
was