das Wörterbuch Polnisch Minus Englisch

język polski - English

zmęczeni Englisch:

1. tired tired


I'm tired.
If you're tired, why don't you go to sleep? "Because if I go to sleep now I will wake up too early."
The king was tired of his sycophants always praising him, so he sent them away.
One is more prone to make mistakes when one is tired.
It gone without saying, if you are tired, you should take a rest.
By the time our long conversation was over, Mother was tired of standing.
It is not so much the heat as the humidity that makes me tired.
Sorry I haven't fixed dinner tonight. I was so tired there was just no way.
We enjoyed seeing the city, but we got a little tired.
You look tired. You ought to rest for an hour or two.
Teachers must get tired of rectifying the same mistakes over and over again in their students' papers.
Tom's muscles were tired and he wanted to get home and soak in a hot bath for a while.
There is no point in studying if you are feeling tired.
He got tired of being the devil's advocate and now agrees with every idea they suggest, no matter how dumb.
He had been repairing the car and looked tired when I arrived home.

Englisch Wort "zmęczeni"(tired) tritt in Sätzen auf:

Dorota 20th Jan 2016 #10

2. grow tired grow tired



3. weary weary


She was weary with age.
I was weary of doing the same thing over and over again.
He'd sat down for a moment to rest his weary legs and suddenly looked up and saw an elderly woman before him.
There is no rest for the weary.
The old man beguiled the weary day with cards.
Come on, sit down and rest your weary legs.
Weary as an adjective means "very tired or worn out," like weary students who finished a long week of studying and taking tests.
She suddenly felt old and weary.
... rhetoric has impressed violence- weary voters.
he was weary of the constant battle between them
Usually, after ten minutes or so he would make it clear that he was weary of my presence.
Children weary me with their constant questions and demands.
including her weary sister Virginia slumped in a chair,
and eventually, as news bulletins and headlines subside, a weary resignation.
I have grown weary