After walking for twenty odd miles, Tom felt more weary than he ever thought possible. Harry insisted that he was much wearier than Tom.
weary, wearier, weariest
Yes, weary is the correct spelling of this word.Some example sentences are:I am growing weary of your nonsense.He looks a bit weary.
'no rest for the wicked' is correct
Weary means tired. Here are some sentences.I am weary of hearing your complaints.He was quite weary after the busy day at work.The weary dog sighed and went to sleep.I felt weary of doing other people's homework for them.After doing 28 laps during P.E, I was too weary and exhausted to swim another five laps around the enormous pool.She sat down in a daze; she was still weary from her run.After the soccer game, Jennifer felt weary."Why are you weary," Asked Melissa's Mother.The weary travelers stopped to rest.
The abstract noun form of the adjective 'weary' is weariness.
wearier, weariest
wearier, weariest
weary, wearier, weariest
Yes, weary is the correct spelling of this word.Some example sentences are:I am growing weary of your nonsense.He looks a bit weary.
No, that is not the right spelling.The correct spelling of the word is weary.For example:I am just a weary old man.The long journey has made them weary.
'no rest for the wicked' is correct
more weary,most weary
Only 'more tired' sounds right. If you wanted a single word you could use 'wearier' instead.
weary
He grew weary as soon as he realised how much work he had to do today.I am beginning to get weary of your nagging.
That is the correct spelling of the adverb "wearily" (as with fatigue or tiredness). The adjective is weary. A similar word is "warily" (with caution or suspicion).
unweary is the opposite of weary