I think you are getting tired of me in French: Je pense que tu te lasses / que tu te fatigues de moi.
strictu sensu "you are heavy", but the expression is more often used in metonymic meaning "I am tired of you"
Maintenant je suis tres fatigue[e]* is an French equivalent of 'I am very tired now'. The words in French are pronounced 'mehn-teh-naw zhuh swee treh fah-tee-gay'.In the word by word translation, the adverb 'maintenant'means 'now'. The subject pronoun 'je' means 'I'. The verb 'suis' means '[I] am'. The adverb 'tres' means 'very'. The adjective/past participle 'fatigue[e]' means 'fatigued, tired'.*The extra 'e' is need if the speaker is female.
"Tired, and you?" It should say "Estoy cansada, y tu?" Meaning "I am tired, and you?"
That's Spanish for "I am very tired now". Since "tired" is in feminine, that means it is a woman who is talking.
"I can't get tired of it" is "je ne m'en lasse pas" in French.
I am tired is "je suis fatigue" :)
'so tired' is translated: tellement fatigue!
The feminine form of "tired" in French is "fatiguée."
"I am tired, how about you?"
We are tired is "nous sommes fatigués" in French. "fatiguées" if it is an all-female group.
fatigué(e)
Sleepy is "endormi" and tired is "fatigué" in French.
je suis fatigué
did you mean tired? that translates 'fatigué(e)' in French.
I think you are getting tired of me in French: Je pense que tu te lasses / que tu te fatigues de moi.
je suis fatigué means 'I'm tired' in French.