Drained of energy or effectiveness; extremely tired; completely exhausted.
Having lost freshness or brilliance of color.
Sinónimos
Examples for "spent"
Examples for "spent"
1His longest project to date, Megos spent 11 days working the problem.
2She had only spent a few weeks in Europe some years ago.
3Thousands of people in Christchurch have spent a second night without power.
4The years her family spent in the Amsterdam home were happy times.
5He spent a great deal of time working out the tom-tom effect.
1Police said they would continue to search until all avenues were exhausted.
2As a result, quotas for those programmes have yet to be exhausted.
3We have exhausted all possible creative solutions on our side, Enria said.
4However, they were left exhausted by the New Zealand team's dogged defence.
5Meanwhile, his main rivals have entered government and exhausted their political capital.
1Being fatigued; laughing; being amused; having been elected; running; having been running.
2But she was young, and like the young, must sleep when fatigued.
3After almost four hours of tedious, repetitive work, he was becoming fatigued.
4Mr. Burke and King out for nardoo; the former returned much fatigued.
5And he was so mortally fatigued with this struggle in the dark.
1Night came and the fagged party in disappointment once more lay down.
2About a mile from the shore, the strength of the fugitives fagged.
3He had long noticed that the Home Secretary looked fagged and ill.
4The march had been terrific, and horses and men were nearly fagged.
5And for a long time Margie has been looking thin and fagged.
1I see nothing, and I'm too dog-tired to go out and look.
2He was dog-tired, for he had had little sleep the past week.
3I'm dog-tired and the mosquitoes are beginning to find that we're here.
4I did not care; I was dog-tired and I wanted but one thing-bed
5By the time we came to the cairn I was dog-tired.
1It also takes up the old worn-out particles; this makes it impure.
2Just like herself: tired, worn-out, never any good even to start with.
3Age and sorrow weigh with a double weight on his worn-out body.
4He pointed in different directions, looking with disgust on the worn-out men.
5Her little feet in the shabby, worn-out shoes scarcely touched the floor.
1This situation played out countless times; different settings, different boys, different words.
2A dangerous game was played out in the halls of secret government.
3The game can be played out over days, weeks, or even months.
4Actually, this scenario has played out countless times in the Earth's history.
5The Coroner's Court: Frank Keeley played out his familiar routine that morning.
1My environment is restored, though with a somewhat washed-out look to it.
2But I had taken against the washed-out tunic I'd put on yesterday.
3The interior of the van looked like a gray, washed-out video feed.
4However, the image of her washed-out face would not leave my mind.
5He held it out with his queer washed-out smile, and Steinmetz smiled.
6The monochrome scenes are in a washed-out grey, not a stylish noir.
7Accompanying her was a nervous-looking fellow whose washed-out face was particularly unattractive.
8I turned on the scope and just got a washed-out bright green.
9She noticed their thin washed-out clothes patched here and there by Lee.
10She had a faded, washed-out look, and her hair was thinning out.
11None of that Sullivan drive, that fire, appeared in his washed-out son.
12His eyes were the palest blue, the shade of a washed-out sky.
13His eyes were like washed-out riverbed stones, almost transparent, piercing and haunted.
14The first symbol was clearly a washed-out example of the second.
15Yes, he said; I know that they have a washed-out and ridiculous appearance.
16They were pallid, washed-out, bloodless; even the youngest looked past middle-age.