A tiring house is like the dressing room.
The tiring house is where the actors would change their attire. There was three entrances which were covered by curtains.
The tiring house was what the dressing room was called during the Elizabethan era, when Shakespeare's plays were being written and performed.
What the banana said to the apple? Nothing!! hah hah hah !
ha
It can be an adjective, and it can also be a verb. You have a tired look on your face. That was a tired joke. He was tired That class exercise tired me. The tired joke and the tired look are adjectives, specifically they are past participles modifying nouns. The last one is an intransitive verb.
Short answer, it's bugged. Long answer it was supposed to be a joke but even the joke part of it was bugged so it basically does nothing.
Nothing is a joke about WW1 or WW2. Get a life
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".
If you mean 'tiring' in the context of: 'that was tiring work' -- Then you have spelt it correctly.Tiring
Because we dont have nothing to drink and its sometimes really tiring getting that drink!!
Just nothing but it was a joke
nothing joke
A pun relies on wordplay, using the different meanings or sounds of words for humor. A joke, on the other hand, can encompass a wider range of comedic techniques, including puns, wordplay, storytelling, and more. Basically, all puns are jokes, but not all jokes are puns.
tiring
The word is spelled fatigued. I was so fatigued, I went straight to bed.
If the joke goes like this: Imagine your in a concert room, with nothing in it. How do you get out? Answer: Stop imagining