fatigué(e)
Maintenant tu es tres fatigué[e]* is a French equivalent of 'You are very tired now'. The words in French are pronounced 'mehn-teh-naw too ay treh fah-tee-gay'.In the word by word translation, the adverb 'maintenant'means 'now'. The subject pronoun 'tu' means 'you'. The verb 'es' means '[you] are'. The adverb 'tres' means 'very'. The adjective/past participle 'fatigué[e]' means 'fatigued, tired'.*The second 'e' is used when the listener is a female.
The word tired is the past tense of the verb to tire. The noun form is the gerund, tiring.The word tired is also an adjective The noun form is tiredness.
Tired contains two syllables.
did you mean tired? that translates 'fatigué(e)' in French.
The word tired is an adjective, and has no plural. Only nouns have plurals.The verb form tired (I tired of it, he tired of the game) is the past tense of to tire.
The feminine form of "tired" in French is "fatiguée."
"Lasser" is a word in the French language. In English, its meaning most closely translates to the word "weary," as in weak and tired.
A homophone for the word "tired" is "tired" – there are no other homophones for this word.
"I can't get tired of it" is "je ne m'en lasse pas" in French.
Sleepy is "ensommeillé" (from the noun 'sommeil' meaning sleep), tired is "fatigué".
The word "tired" is an adjective.
tired?
I am tired is "je suis fatigue" :)
In French, tired is: Masculine: Fatigué ( je suis fatigué ) Feminine: Fatiguée ( Elle est fatiguée )
'so tired' is translated: tellement fatigue!
more tired
I'm tired, and you?