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
Yes, the word tired can be a predicate nominative when it 'renames' the subject. Predicate nominatives follow a 'linking' verb. Examples: Mary is tired. (Mary = tired) Mary became tired. (Mary > tired) They were tired. (They = tired) When used with a non-linking verb, tired is not a predicate nominative. Examples: That dog is a tired old thing. (tired is an adjective modifying the object or the sentence) The tired kids were ready for a nap. (tired is an adjective modifying the subject of the sentence)
Only if there is no semicolon between "tired" and "you".
This sentence is a reported sentence and 'that' is a conjunction. It introduces the 'that clause' - he was tired.
ran tired
my name is jessica.
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
Jessica had a premonition about what was to come.
Seems is the verb. To be tired is a verbal phrase, a verb form functioning as another part of speech in this sentence.
was
I am a monastery clergy that is tired