Yes, but it sometimes sounds wrong and you have to be careful how you use it.
Example: Megan was so weighed down with tirednessthat she couldn't play volleyball with her two little brothers that night.
Jody and Bobby both agreed that tiredness is like a sickness: it prevents you from doing pretty much anythin.
The boy had tiredness in his face after school.
the word means to walk or work in a slow way because of tiredness.
She had been feeling general malaise in her body for so long--aches and pains and unexplained tiredness--that she eventually went to the doctor and was diagnosed with fibromyalgia.
The word "fatigue" means "mental or physical exhaustion: extreme tiredness or weariness resulting from physical or mental activity." Used in a sentence: He ran for so long that he almost fainted from fatigue.
A symptom for extreme tiredness is extreme tiredness
if your using the term i am thinking of by the word rigged then i would say i rigged the ropes. Or if it was the other meaning you could say i was rigged with tiredness or something like that. hope this helps.
"So" can be used as a conjunction to show cause and effect, meaning "therefore" or "as a result." For example, "I was feeling tired, so I decided to take a nap." In this sentence, "so" connects the feeling of tiredness to the decision to take a nap.
Tiredness and weariness are synonyms of fatigue.
You can not reverse muscle tiredness, you just have to rest them.
Yes it does cause tiredness and fatigue.
Exhaustion is another word for extreme tiredness.
Fatigue means the state of tiredness.