Exhaust or get tired through overuse or great strain or stress.
In need of some rest or sleep, usually as a result of hard work or physical activity.
Sinònims
Examples for "wear "
Examples for "wear "
1 The ready - to - wear clothes industry, New York's major industry, is almost exclusively Jewish.
2 Wrap dresses are easy to wear and hide all your problem areas.
3 She asserts, quite trenchantly, her right to wear trousers on State occasions.
4 I wish people would wear them from a voluntary basis, she said.
5 Ultimately, of course, what you wear on your bike is personal choice.
1 She's noted that 'pandemic fatigue ' is affecting many citizens at the moment.
2 Workers have voiced concerns that fatigue levels are putting safety at risk.
3 However, fatigue prevented four subjects from group P from completing the trial.
4 He said in recent media interviews that he had suffered from fatigue .
5 Multivariate regression methods were used to identify significant factors associated with fatigue .
1 Half an hour later, he reported for work at the tire plant.
2 Goodyear previously said it would discontinue consumer tire production at the plant.
3 Goodyear sold its North American farm tire business to Titan in 2005.
4 For instance, I am no longer permitted to change a punctured tire .
5 The result is a cacophony of engine noise, tire squeal, and numbers.
1 And a jade platter of dainty food calls for a million coins.
2 Swiftly Peggy stooped and unfastened the little jade god from far-off China.
3 She had served the tin gods in temples of gold and jade .
4 The great giraffe seal of pink jade was also displayed to advantage.
5 Somewhere in the final issue, Lady Stardust should wear a jade dress.
1 A pall of corruption hangs over several countries, seemingly impossible to diminish.
2 A pall of dense cloud, many miles in thickness, enfolds the earth.
3 There was a coffin in the boat, covered with a simple pall .
4 The pall - bearers having deposited their charge in front of the pulpit, Rev.
5 The silence in the room was deathly, the heat intense, heavy, pall - like .
1 You know, in case TMZ is having a fag break or something.
2 It is late September at the fag end of the tourism season.
3 They said that the whole world would know he was a fag .
4 Albert dropped his fag and stood on it on the way in.
5 They smoked fag after fag , lighting the new ones on the butts.
1 A pair of gauntlets will outwear three or four pairs of gloves.
2 See, the organ-constricting, bone-crunching corset as an underwear - as - outwear look is NOT for everyone.
3 Such a worm gear will, I fancy, outwear a dozen of the scientific sort.
4 Insulated by thermal outwear and whiskey, Roe's isolated professor is tellingly exploring the void.
5 Same footwear rules as women apply and denim, tracksuits, leggings, casual outwear are also banned.
1 Archie grabbed a fag out of her packet and lit up.
2 Jack stubbed his fag out viciously against the table.
3 Jack fished another fag out of the pack.
4 Biddy, wait,-girlshave no innings-girlsonly fag out .
5 He must be exhausted, and as they say here, all fagged out .
1 He was without the helmet and body covering they wear upon the exterior.
2 The perversity of things, animate and inanimate, was beginning to wear upon him.
3 We often hear how our modern appliances wear upon our nerves.
4 But what means this scarf which you wear upon your shoulder?
5 The bodily exertion had begun to wear upon him during the last few minutes.
1 He must tire out the Frenchman in the end, he thought.
2 Most of these remakes tire out at the box office before they arrive.
3 For you won't tire out my patience, or break my heart.
4 The wrappings and trappings often tire out the hapless viewer before the main event.
5 I'd tire out all the judges and juries in London.
1 And so you wear out your eyesight in the working of chairs.
2 The toil was fitted to wear out the strongest of his men.
3 Running less than an hour, the film doesn't wear out its welcome.
4 Gee, but he does wear out the engines in his cars, Whitney.
5 So ladies and gentlemen, we're going to wear out some shoe leather.
1 The scores helped wear down the challenge of the relegation-threatened home team.
2 Given enough time, my battle cruisers can probably wear down that battleship.
3 After several minutes of kicking and scratching, she began to wear down .
4 They've adopted a guerrilla policy to try and wear down our fleet.
5 But time and change soon wear down these first fancies of youth.
1 Factor in plenty of sea days: they're important for recharging weary batteries.
2 Even in strike - weary France, the work stoppage is affecting Euro Disney stock.
3 There was no respite for a weary looking London stock market yesterday.
4 The weary government keeps control from the centre of the vast city.
5 Not really horsemen, he decided, but tired men leading their weary animals.
6 The effect was that he looked weary , which was perhaps the case.
7 This is an important consideration for bailout - weary euro zone governments like Germany.
8 She never grew weary of hearing the latest political news or gossip.
9 A great weary sadness, as if he'd leapt abruptly forward in age.
10 Both were weary of the industry, yet recognised something within each other.
11 But now, I am weary ; the pastime palls; you no longer amuse.
12 For the moment she was far too weary to improve her surroundings.
13 I am very weary ; twelve leagues on foot; I am very hungry.
14 I am weary of it; I am weary of the whole thing.
15 Even in his weak and weary state, Borenson saw it all clearly.
16 I believe this report will weary and bewilder people more than others.
Other examples for "weary"
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About this term Verb
Indicative · Present
Weary across language varieties