The word "exhaust" is a noun form as a word for the gases emitted from a motor or an engine, and the pipes or ducts through which the gases pass.The noun forms for the verb toexhaustare exhauster, exhaustion, and the gerund, exhausting.
No, the word 'exhausted' is a verb; the past participle, past tense of the verb to exhaust. The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective (the exhausted runners).The noun form exhaustion is an abstract noun as a word for fatigue or completely used up.The noun exhaust is a concrete noun as a word for expelled waste, a physical substance.
No, the word "tired" is not a linking verb. It is an adjective that describes a state of fatigue or exhaustion. Linking verbs are verbs that connect the subject of a sentence to a subject complement, such as "is," "became," or "appear."
No. too - adverb tired - adjective
He worked on his project to exhaustion, and he got an A.
They were overcome with exhaustion after their race up the hill.
Bleeding and heat exhaustion are not related.
AN antonym for exhaustion would be energize. Another would be vitality.
Exhaustion/fatigue Headache Nausea Incoherence Hallucination potentially
During the marathon, three runners collapsed from exhaustion.
The word 'exhausted' is the past participle, past tense of the verb to exhaust.The past participle of the verb also functions as an adjective.The word exhaust is also a noun, a word for waste gases or air expelled from an engine, turbine, or other machine; a word for a thing.The noun forms of the verb to exhaust are exhaustion and the gerund, exhausting.
The word swag is both a noun and a verb, but swag is not an adjective. Example sentences: Noun: A swag would really be the best choice for a window drape. Verb: He returned with his face swagged with exhaustion. Note: The use of swag to mean valuables is a slang term.