Deep word for tired

Synonyms of tired

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1

as in exhausted

depleted in strength, energy, or freshness

I’m usually tired after a long day of working in the yard


Antonyms & Near Antonyms

2

as in bored

having one’s patience, interest, or pleasure exhausted

I’m sick and tired of your antics


Antonyms & Near Antonyms

3

as in stereotyped

used or heard so often as to be dull

such tired phrases won’t hold your reader’s interest


Antonyms & Near Antonyms

past tense of tire

1

as in weakened

to diminish the physical strength of

I don’t want our walk to tire you too much


Antonyms & Near Antonyms

2

as in wearied

to make weary and restless by being dull or monotonous

this long dry lecture will tire the audience if you don’t insert some jokes into it


Antonyms & Near Antonyms

3

as in wore

to use up all the physical energy of

this pentathlon will tire all but the hardiest athletes


Antonyms & Near Antonyms

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Cite this Entry

“Tired.” Merriam-Webster.com Thesaurus, Merriam-Webster, https://www.merriam-webster.com/thesaurus/tired. Accessed 13 Apr. 2023.

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adjective

exhausted, as by exertion; fatigued or sleepy:They provided water to a tired runner.

weary or bored (usually followed by of): I’m tired of eating the same food every day.

hackneyed; stale, as a joke, phrase, or sermon: The standup comedian’s tired old gags got no laughs.

Informal. impatient or disgusted: You make me tired.

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Origin of tired

1

First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English tyred; see origin at tire1;see also -ed2

synonym study for tired

1. Tired, exhausted, fatigued, wearied, weary suggest a condition in which a large part of one’s energy and vitality has been consumed. One who is tired has used up a considerable part of their bodily or mental resources: to feel tired at the end of the day. One who is exhausted is completely drained of energy and vitality, usually because of arduous or long-sustained effort: The horse was left exhausted after a hard run. One who is fatigued has consumed energy to a point where rest and sleep are demanded: A good workout can leave you feeling rather pleasantly fatigued. One who is wearied has been under protracted exertion or strain that has gradually worn out their strength: The sentry sat down, wearied by a long vigil. Weary suggests a more permanent condition than wearied: The family is weary of struggling against misfortunes.

WORDS THAT MAY BE CONFUSED WITH tired

tired , tried

Words nearby tired

Tirana, Tiranë, Tiraspol, tire, tire chain, tired, tired out, Tiree, tire iron, tireless, tirelessly

Other definitions for tired (2 of 2)

Origin of tired

2

First recorded in 1890–95; tire2 + -ed3

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

Words related to tired

annoyed, bored, distressed, drained, exasperated, fatigued, irritated, overworked, sleepy, stale, beat, collapsing, consumed, drooping, empty, enervated, fagged, faint, finished, flagging

How to use tired in a sentence

  • In the early 1990s, Gilbert remembers arriving in Melbourne a week before the tournament and trying to race his way into playing shape, only to feel tired two days later.

  • On Christmas Day, she said she was tired and went back to bed.

  • After hours and hours of boiling, you may get a tired of watching your cauldron bubble, but don’t give in to the temptation to wander off and work on some other project.

  • Isolating in her bedroom, Shorter felt more tired every day.

  • In my late teens, I quickly tired of sleeping on friends’ couches.

  • Kim Kardashian Breaks the InternetTalking about butts in relation to Kim Kardashian had become tired.

  • I answered his questions perfunctorily, begging off that I was soon to return to my dorm, as I was tired.

  • If your ears are tired of slick auto-tuned vocals, pick up this disk for an aural detox.

  • But Winter is dead, Clapton is tired of life on the road, and King unreliable in concert.

  • Hitchcock saw human behavior fresh, even in a tired form like melodrama.

  • It ended on a complaint that she was ‘tired rather and spending my time at full length on a deck-chair in the garden.’

  • But this time, with all his cunning and perspiration, he could not induce another throb in the tired engines.

  • When he gets quite large the boy will get tired of having him for a pet, and perhaps bring him back.

  • But I am afraid you would very soon get tired of us, and I ought to tell you, frankly, that our little home is to be—a broken up.

  • Aunt Ri was looking forward to the rest with great anticipation; she was heartily tired of being on the move.

British Dictionary definitions for tired


adjective

weary; fatigued

(foll by of)

  1. having lost interest in; boredI’m tired of playing cards
  2. having lost patience with; exasperated byI’m tired of his eternal excuses

hackneyed; stalethe same tired old jokes

tired and emotional euphemistic slightly drunk

Derived forms of tired

tiredly, adverbtiredness, noun

Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition
© William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins
Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Idioms and Phrases with tired


In addition to the idiom beginning with tired

  • tired out

also see:

  • dead on one’s feet (tired)
  • sick and tired

The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary
Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

Host and founder of Thinking in English, Tom is committed to providing quality and interesting content to all English learners. Previously a research student at a top Japanese university and with a background in English teaching, political research, and Asian languages, Tom is now working fulltime on bettering Thinking in English!



Are you a ‘exhausted,’ ‘dead on your feet,’ or ‘worn out?’ On today’s episode of Thinking in English, let’s learn some excellent vocabulary to describe tiredness in English!!



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Last week, I released an episode on lazy vocabulary. I told you quite a few different ways to describe that lazy feeling we all get from time to time. However, while writing and researching for the episode, a lot of the words, phrases, and terms I came up with didn’t necessarily describe “laziness” – instead they referred to “tiredness.”

What is the difference between being lazy and being tired? Often, we use similar language to describe both feelings, but they are different! “Lazy” means you are unwilling to do work or any effort, and “tired” means you need rest or sleep.

Sometimes these two situations can look similar – if you spend a lot of time sleeping in the morning you could be either “tired” or “lazy.” However, if you are “tired” you need to rest or sleep, but if you are “lazy” you want to rest or sleep (or perhaps more accurately, if you are lazy you don’t want to do anything else).

Being tired is incredibly common – you can be tired in the evening before you sleep, tired in the morning after you wake up, tired after a long day at work, tired after physical exercise, or tired after sitting down all day on a plane. I’m tired right now – I tend to write podcasts late at night and as I’m taking some short trips over the next few weeks I’ve been working a lot to prepare podcasts in advance. So, I’m always tired. 

With all of these different situations and circumstances, surely there are different and more interesting ways of saying that you are tired? English actually has hundreds of different ways to describe this feeling! Throughout the rest of this episode, I’m going to introduce some of my favourite alternatives to “tired” – I’ll try to introduce a mix of the most common synonyms, formal options, slang, and maybe a few phrases and idioms! 

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Weary

Weary is definitely one of the most common and useful synonyms for ‘tired’ in the English language. The word weary suggests that you feel weak due to a lack of energy. If you are weary, you are very tired after working hard for a long time! Weary comes from Old English, so it has been a part of the English language for over a thousand years!

“The traveller was weary after a long journey”

Sleep Red Panda – Photo by Ivan Cujic on Pexels.com

Fatigued

Fatigued is another very common alternative to the word “tired.” Fatigue traces its origins back to a Latin word meaning “enough”: so if you are fatigued you have had enough! We use both the noun fatigue and the adjective fatigued when we are very, very tired!

“She was so fatigued, that we could all see the dark circles under her eyes”

Exhausted

Even stronger than “fatiguedis “exhausted.” We use exhausted to describe the feeling of being really tired.  All of your energy has been taken out of you, and now you are exhausted  you are completely empty of energy! 

“I was absolutely exhausted after a long week at work”

Drained

Similar to “exhausted” is drained. Drained also has a similar image in the head of a native English speaker – both “exhausted” and drained mean to be emptied of energy. If you are drained you are really tired. We also use drained a lot to describe being “emotionally tired” – not just physically!

“You look drained – why not go to bed early?” 

Worn Out

Now let’s have a quick look at a few phrasal verbs that we often use when we are tired. Worn out suggests a similar level of tiredness to “exhausted” and “drained.” If you are worn out, you are extremely tired. A person who is worn out is exhausted after working hard or going through a difficult or unpleasant experience. 

“He was worn out after hiking up the mountain!”

Burnt Out

Burnt out refers to a specific type, or instance, or tiredness – and it is very commonly used, especially in recent years. If you are burnt out, you make yourself exhausted and extremely tired by working too hard and too much. Working long days, without taking breaks or time to relax, can lead to burn out! Many companies have been allowing employees more flexible working schedules to help prevent their employees becoming burnt out!

“After not taking a day off for over a year, the manager was always burnt out

Informal ‘Tired’ Vocabulary

The rest of the “tiredness” synonyms I’m going to introduce today are going to be less formal – they are still commonly used, but less so in formal or professional situations! 

Spent

Spent is an adjective that we use to mean exhausted. Like “exhausted” or “drained,” spent has a similar idea of being empty of energy. We can say we spend energy, so if your energy is spent there is none left! Something that is spent has been used so that it no longer has any power or effectiveness! 

“Sorry, I have to cancel our plans tonight – I’m absolutely spent

Sleepy

Sleepy was the favourite adjective of my students while I was a teacher in Japanese elementary schools. Sleepy goes beyond “tired” to suggest that you are also “worn out” and able to fall asleep at pretty much any time. Sometimes, you can be “exhausted” without being sleepy – for example after taking part in a sports game! So it is important to use sleepy in the right context. 

“The child was so sleepy that she fell asleep almost as soon as she got into bed”

Drowsy 

Drowsy is another way of saying sleepy – but with a slightly different emphasis. Drowsy is kind of in between being awake and being asleep. If you feel drowsy you cannot think clearly and probably want to fall asleep. We are often drowsy when we wake up in the morning or after we eat a big meal!

“The room is so warm it’s making me drowsy

Dead on one’s feet 

Dead on one’s feet means to be almost falling asleep because one is so tired. This is an English idiom, and is used quite often by people! If your are dead on your feet you are extremely tired. Dead on your feet is often used to describe feeling exhausted while you are still working or walking around. 

“That football player ran so much today that he was dead on his feet by the end of the game!”

Pooped 

Pooped is a slang term to describe being tired. If you are pooped, you are very tired from doing a lot of physical activity. Pooped is informal, and tends to be more common in North American English! 

“He was pooped after cleaning the entire apartment”

Barely Able to Keep One’s Eyes Open

The final phrase I want to introduce today is barely able to keep your eyes open. You can probably imagine the meaning of this one – you are so sleepy that it is difficult to keep your eyes open. I’m sure we’ve all been hardly able to keep one’s eyes open. It is an idiom similar in meaning to “sleepy” and “drowsy.”

“I was barely able to keep my eyes open during that class”

Final Thought

On this episode of Thinking in English, I have tried to introduce you to some alternative ways of talking about tiredness! Everyone gets tired, so I think it is really useful and important to have a few different ways to describe feeling tired! I’m sure all of you have been exhausted, dead on your feet, or worn out at some point.

Do you know any other ways of saying “tired” in English? Let me know in the comments!


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Have you ever been so tired, you didn’t have a word off the top of your head to call such a state of exhaustion? Where words fail you, they’ve succeeded for someone else, and that’s how slang terms are born.

We’ve created this list of slang words for tired to show you how colorful language can be. The next time you find yourself struggling to keep your eyes open, remember these phrases and try using them to describe how you feel.

Slang Words for Tired (in Alphabetical Order)

B

Baked

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): To be extremely tired. This is one you’ll need to be careful with, however, because it can occasionally be used to refer to the state of being high on drugs, usually marijuana.
  • Example: “After several hours of taking the exam, Henry was absolutely baked.”

Beat

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): A common slang term in the US to describe exhaustion.
  • Example: “Man, I’m beat. I’m going to go to bed early.”

Bone Tired

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): When you are so tired, you can practically feel it in your bones. A penetrating state of exhaustion.
  • Example: “She was so bone tired, she collapsed as soon as she got home.”

Bushed

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): A somewhat uncommon phrase that means tired.
  • Example: “Mike’s bushed right now. How about we wait until tomorrow before we ask for his help?”

C

Cashed

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Bushed.

Checked Out

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): A state of mental fatigue. It comes from the concept of checking bags out or checking out of a hotel room.
  • Example: “You can tell she’s mentally checked out right now. Her eyes aren’t focused.”

Chuntered

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): Another rare term for tiredness.
  • Example: “After spending all night at the pub, I’m chuntered.”

Crash/Crashed

Meaning:

  • (Verb): To lose all energy and usually fall into a deep sleep.
  • Example: “I’m going to crash the moment I get home.”

Cream Crackered

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): Cockney rhyming slang that rhymes with the word Knackered (seen later on in this list). It simply means you’re tired.
  • Example: “Annie is always cream crackered after work.”

Crunchy

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Bushed.

D

Dead on Your Feet

Meaning:

  • (Expression): A common phrase that describes someone who is up and about, walking around, but seems completely exhausted. Such a person may be yawning, staring into space, or otherwise behaving like a zombie.
  • Example: “You need to get to bed because you’re clearly dead on your feet.”

Dead Tired

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Dead on Your Feet.

Dead/Deaded

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): To be deeply exhausted. This can sometimes also mean that something was really funny to you, though, especially in slang used by Generation Z.
  • Example: “She cancelled on her date tonight because she was deaded.”

Done

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): To be so tired, you can’t deal with anything else.
  • Example: “Listen, I’m done for the day. I need to go to bed, and then maybe I’ll do more tomorrow.”

Done In

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): The state of being tired out of something.
  • Example: “That shift really did Mark in. He’s been sleeping since he got home.”

Donezo

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): Slang word that just means “done” or finished, but it can be applied to physical or mental exhaustion.
  • Example: “Becky studied for four straight hours. She’s donezo.”

Drained

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): A mental or emotional state in which you feel as if all your energy is gone.
  • Example: “The exhausting argument left John totally drained.”

E

Exhaustipated

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): Slang word that combines the words “exhausted” and “constipated.” It means that you are so tired, you don’t give a crap about anything anymore.
  • Example: “Talk to me about it tomorrow because I’m exhaustipated right now.”

F

Food Coma

Meaning:

  • (Noun): This is what happens when you eat a really heavy meal, and it leaves you tired. There’s a common Hawaiian slang word for this: kanak attack.
  • Example: “Every year after the Thanksgiving dinner, I fall into a deep food coma for a few hours.”

Fried

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): When you feel as if your brain has been short-circuited from exhaustion.
  • Example: “The bride was fried after her long wedding day.”

Frogged

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Bushed.

G

Groggy

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): To feel weak or exhausted, usually from illness or after poor sleep.
  • Example: “After Beth’s cat kept her up all night, she felt groggy.”

H

Hit

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): Another slang term for tired.
  • Example: “Whew, what a day! I’m hit.”

K

Knackered

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): Common British slang for when one is tired.
  • Example: “Jacques wished he hadn’t stayed up so late the night before, because he’s knackered today.”

N

No Spoons/Don’t Have the Spoons

Meaning:

  • (Expression): This expression developed in reference to people who have mental illnesses or invisible disabilities. If you don’t have spoons, it means you don’t have the energy to do something, usually as a result of that illness or disability.
  • Example: “My anxiety is terrible today. I’m sorry, I just don’t have the spoons to do deal with this right now.”

O

Out of It

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): To be in an unsteady mental and physical state as a result of exhaustion. Someone who is “out of it” might be zoning out, falling asleep, or being unusually quiet.
  • Example: “Anna had a long day, so she’s a little out of it.”

P

Petered Out

Meaning:

  • (Verb): Losing energy gradually because you do a lot of activities or work.
  • Example: “He petered out at the end of the day after working on the farm.”

Pooched

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Hit.

Pooped

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Hit also.

R

Rooted

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): When you are so tired, you feel like you can’t move.
  • Example: “That was a tough workout. I’m rooted. Give me some time to recover.”

Running on Fumes

Meaning:

  • (Expression): When you’re so tired, you feel as if you’re moments away from collapsing or falling asleep, but you’re still up and moving.
  • Example: “She needs to go home because she’s clearly running on fumes.”

S

Shattered

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): When you’re totally exhausted, to the point of feeling broken and on the verge of collapse.
  • Example: “I just ran a marathon. I’m shattered.”

Shot

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Shattered.

Sleepyhead

Meaning:

  • (Noun): A person who’s physically tired.
  • Example: “Ariana is such a sleepyhead today. I think she needs more sleep.”

Slumped

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Shattered.

Spent

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): To have “spent” all your energy so that you have no energy left.
  • Example: “Guys, I’m spent. I’m going home.”

T

Tapped

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Spent.

Tired AF

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): To be “tired as f*ck.” This is an extreme state of exhaustion that goes above and beyond a little grogginess.
  • Example: “She posted a status saying she’s tired AF after a day on the hiking trails.”

Tuckered Out

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): To be tired out after doing something. This one can be used to refer to either being slightly tired or deeply tired.
  • Example: “I’m feeling a bit tuckered out right now, so I think I’ll take a nap.”

U

Under the Weather

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): An expression that means you’re not feeling your best. It could be because you’re tired, ill, or just not feeling your best emotionally.
  • Example: “She didn’t go to the party because she’s feeling a little under the weather.”

W

Wasted

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Shattered. Be careful with this phrase, though, because wasted can also mean drunk.

Read Also: British Slang for Drunk: 122 Words with Examples

Weary

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): When you’re visibly tired out by something.
  • Example: “She felt weary after her experience at the DMV.”
  • (Verb): Something that tires you out.
  • Example: “Going into the doctor’s office is always a wearying experience for Janet.”

Wiped Out

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Tired AF.

Worn Out

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Tuckered Out.

Wrecked

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): See Shattered.

Z

Zoinked

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): To be in a state of sleepiness.
  • Example: “Hank was too zoinked to repair his bike today.”

Zonked

Meaning:

  • (Adjective): Extreme exhaustion or intoxication.
  • Example: “Ben spent his evening at the bar and came home completely zonked.”

Wrap Up

Being completely exhausted isn’t a fun experience. No one likes being at that point where it’s a battle just to keep your eyes open! If you’re feeling tired beyond belief, hopefully this list helped you come up with a new way to explain how you’re feeling to others.

Up for more reading? Take a look at our list of slang words for jewelry to learn more interesting phrases.

‘TIRED’ is a 5 letter
Word
starting with T and ending with D

All Solutions for TIRED

Clue Answer

TIRED
(4)

BEAT

TIRED
(4)

BONE

TIRED
(4)

DEAD

TIRED
(4)

DOZY

TIRED
(4)

DULL

TIRED
(4)

HACK

TIRED
(4)

IDLE

TIRED
(4)

LAZY

TIRED
(4)

LIMP

TIRED
(4)

USED

TIRED
(4)

WORN

TIRED
(5)

BORED

TIRED
(5)

EMPTY

TIRED
(5)

JADED

TIRED
(5)

SPENT

TIRED
(5)

STALE

TIRED
(5)

TRITE

TIRED
(5)

WEARY

TIRED
(6)

ASLEEP

TIRED
(6)

AWEARY

TIRED
(6)

BEATEN

TIRED
(6)

BUSHED

TIRED
(6)

DOZING

TIRED
(6)

DROWSY

TIRED
(6)

GROGGY

TIRED
(6)

OLDHAT

TIRED
(6)

SLEEPY

TIRED
(7)

DORMANT

TIRED
(7)

NODDING

TIRED
(7)

TEDIOUS

TIRED
(7)

WEARIED

TIRED
(7)

YAWNING

TIRED
(8)

CONSUMED

TIRED
(8)

DEPLETED

TIRED
(8)

EXPENDED

TIRED
(8)

HARASSED

TIRED
(8)

FATIGUED

TIRED
(9)

EXHAUSTED

TIRED
(9)

GREWWEARY

TIRED
(9)

SOMNOLENT

TIRED
(10)

OVERWORKED

TIRED
(10)

EXHAUSTING

TIRED
(11)

DEBILITATED

TIRED
(12)

DISSATISFIED

Synonyms, crossword answers and other related words for TIRED

We hope that the following list of synonyms for the word tired will help
you to finish your
crossword today. We’ve arranged the synonyms in length order so that they are easier to find.

tired 4 letter words

tired 5 letter words

tired 6 letter words

tired 7 letter words

tired 8 letter words

tired 9 letter words

tired 10 letter words

tired 11 letter words

tired 12 letter words

tired 13 letter words

tired 14 letter words

Top answers for TIRED crossword clue from newspapers


WORN


SLEEPY


WEARY


SPENT


STALE

Definition of tired

  • depleted of strength or energy; «tired mothers with crying babies»; «too tired to eat»

Anagrams of tired

TRIDE

TRIED

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More clues you might be interested in

  1. north american
  2. credo
  3. state of being married
  4. seaside froth
  5. expressed publicly
  6. bank manager
  7. highlander’s dagger
  8. to disgrace or dishonour
  9. greek mountain
  10. refurbishment
  11. french clergyman
  12. ethanamide
  13. civet
  14. herd or flock
  15. shatter
  16. photocopy
  17. character in hamlet
  18. kind of music
  19. second hand
  20. controversial
  21. corundum
  22. fiber
  23. grinding tooth
  24. romantic partner
  25. fade
  26. take over
  27. einstein
  28. substance that dissolves another
  29. stifled laugh
  30. like some scientists

Score for TIRED

TIRED is an official word in Scrabble with 6 points.

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