i don't get it
A tiring house is like the dressing room.
the tiring room in The Globe was where the actors would get changed into their clothes for the next perfomance.
A tiring-house was a one room changing area for actors in Elizabethian theater.
The tiring house was what the dressing room was called during the Elizabethan era, when Shakespeare's plays were being written and performed.
The backstage of Elizabethan theatres was called the "tiring house". The word "tiring" comes from the word "attire", or clothing, so the word "tiring house" means basically "dressing room".
Tiring is a contraction of attiring, meaning dressing. This is related to the word "attire" for clothes. A tiring house is a place to dress, a dressing-room. It also served as a place to store scripts and costumes, and to repair costumes and props.
If you mean 'tiring' in the context of: 'that was tiring work' -- Then you have spelt it correctly.Tiring
it has no name! it is just a backstage area!
tiring
The stage wall structure contained at least three doors which lead to a leading to small structure, back stage, called the ' Tiring House '. The stage wall was covered by curtains allowing entrances from left, right and centre. The actors used this area to change their attire - hence the name 'Tiring House'. The tiring house contained the dressing rooms with access to the the prop room with connecting passage and stairways. The 'Tiring House' was a hive of activity with actors changing their attire and collecting their props.
Very tiring or exhaustgrueling means tierd or tiring
"Today was not as tiring as it was yesterday" can also be used.