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Suggestions: are you tired
These examples may contain rude words based on your search.
These examples may contain colloquial words based on your search.
Sei stanco,
Sei stanca,
È stanco,
Siete stanchi,
are you tired 105
you are tired 60
Are you tired, Sebastin, or in a bad mood?
Sei stanco, Sebastiàn, o di cattivo umore?
'Are you tired, or not?
"Sei stanco, o no"?
Are you tired, dear.
Sei stanca, tesoro mio?
Are you tired, Mom?
Sei stanca, mamma?
Are you tired, Charles?
È stanco, Charles? - No.
Are you tired, Director?
È stanco, signor regista?
Are you tired, overwhelmed, afraid, hurting, or just plain uninspired and stuck?
Sei stanco, sopraffatto, hai paura, stai male o sei semplicemente privo di stimoli e bloccato?
Are you tired, not just of the consequences of your sin, but also of the fact that it keeps happening?
Sei stanco, non solo delle conseguenze del tuo peccato, ma anche del fatto che continua ad accadere?
Are you tired, honey?
Sei stanco, amore?
Are you tired, sweetie?
Sei stanco, tesoro?
Are you tired, darling?
Sei stanco, tesoro?
Are you tired, Ryan?
Sei stanco, Ryan?
Are you tired, my love?
Sei stanca, tesoro?
Are you tired, bubby?
Sei stanca, ciccia?
Are you tired, Mr. Ruiz?
È stanco, signor Ruiz?
Are you tired, Grandpa?
Sei stanco, nonno?
Are you tired, Dad?
Sei stanco, papà?
Are you sick, are you tired,
Sei stufa, sei stanca,
Are you tired, I understand.
Ti sei stancato, lo capisco.
Or are you tired, even slightly depressed? Perhaps you've lost touch with your own special *dream* over the years.
O siete stanco, persino un po' depresso? Forse avete perso il tocco con il vostro proprio *dream* specia. ..
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by Lingookies
How exactly do you say I am tired in Italian? Are there more ways to say it?
In this lesson, we will take a look at the different ways you can translate this sentence into Italian. Read on to learn them all!
Let’s start! Iniziamo!
Table of Contents
Sono stanco is how you translate I am tired in Italian if you are a male.
Sono stanco
I am tired (masculine)
This is because Italian has two genders, and all adjectives are either masculine or feminine.
This common sentence in Italian is made of two elements.
Sono
I am
Stanco
Tired
For example, you could say:
Sono stanco di giocare a scacchi. Cambiamo gioco!
I’m tired of playing chess. Let’s change the game!
Stasera non mi va di andare al cinema, sono stanco. Magari domani!
I don’t feel like going to the movies tonight, I’m tired. Maybe tomorrow!
Sono is a conjugation of the verb essere, meaning to be. Sono is basically the first person singular present conjugation of essere. This is an irregular verb.
Present tense conjugation for essere
io | sono |
tu | sei |
lui, lei | è |
noi | siamo |
voi | siete |
loro | sono |
For example, you could say…
È l’una del pomeriggio.
It is one o’clock in the afternoon.
Io e Luca siamo sposati dal 1996.
Luke and I have been married since 1996.
Now, what do you have to say to say I am tired in Italian if you are a female? Let’s see what this form is exactly in the next paragraph.
Sono stanca is how you translate I am tired in Italian if you are a female.
Sono stanca
I am tired (female)
Always make sure you use the correct gender of the adjective: if you use a masculine adjective and you are a girl, or viceversa, it will sound strange!
If you want to stress how tired you are, you can either use sono stanchissimo/a or sono stanco/a morto/a.
The first is what Italians call a superlativo, which has no direct translation into English but could be translated as “I am terribly tired”.
Sono stanchissimo
I am terribly tired (male)
Sono stanchissima
I am terribly tired (female)
The second expression is simply the Italian translation for I am dead tired.
Sono stanco morto
I am dead tired (male)
Sono stanca morta
I am dead tired (female)
Other common synonyms for tired are sfinito (worn out), esausto (exhausted) and distrutto (destructed).
Sono sfinito
I am worn out (male)
Sono esausto
I am exhausted (male)
Sono distrutto
I am destructed (male)
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Of course, female versions also exist.
Sono sfinita
I am worn out (female)
Sono esausta
I am exhausted (female)
Sono distrutta
I am destructed (female)
And that’s it, now you know how to say I am tired in Italian in all its forms!
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Entertainment
Neapolitan Salvatore Striano spent half his life shooting, robbing, sitting in prison, sniffing cocaine, playing cards and sitting again. And then he quit and began acting in films.
Mark Franchetti
Last winter was a particularly stellar closing of the Berlin Film Festival. Angelina Jolie in a sparkling gilded evening dress walked the red carpet with Brad Pitt hand in hand. Christian Bale and Jury President Mike Lee squinted as usual under the bombardment of persistent flashes. One of the last to walk the red carpet was the most inconspicuous of the festival guests.
Salvatore Striano (simply Sasa to his friends) wore a simple black jacket, with a checkered arafatka around his neck; it was evident from everything that he did not really understand where to put himself. The confusion on his face turned to panic when, less than an hour later, the film of the Taviani brothers "Caesar must die", where Sasa played one of the main roles, received the Golden Bear.
Coming out to reporters after the ceremony, Striano looked like a grenade had just exploded next to him. Not surprisingly, his acting career happened against all logic. Before appearing on the red carpet of the Berlinale, Sasa was a professional gangster for a decade and a half. He committed his first crime at ten, and as a teenager he joined the ranks of the Neapolitan mafia, known to the world under the terrifying name of the Camorra. He participated in armed raids, racketeering raids, and shootouts with rival gangs. Sat on cocaine, wanted by Interpol, spent a total of 12 years behind bars. Whether or not he has ever been killed, only he knows.
During his last term in Rebibbia, one of Italy's most famous maximum security prisons, Sasa joined a theater group and began studying Shakespeare. Then - a turn from the Christmas story: a non-trivial hobby awakened a conscience in an inveterate criminal and gave him a new profession. After his release five years ago, Striano severed ties with the Camorra and began a different life.
Taviani's film was filmed entirely in Rebibbia in the Neapolitan dialect and follows in the format of a documentary chronicle the staging of Shakespeare's "Julius Caesar" by prison amateur performances. 39-year-old Sasa, who played Brutus, received a special permit for two months to return to prison for filming; the former Camorrist was one of two actors who came from the outside. All other participants in the prison mystery are real prisoners serving serious sentences for serious things, up to and including murder. “They starred in a film about betrayal, power, guilt and regret; a true prisoner classic,” says Striano. “There are a lot of parallels between Shakespeare and life inside the Camorra. Returning to prison as a free man is a surreal experience, and quite painful. I didn't know how to deal with former homies; I leaned back a long time ago, and they are all sitting. Of course, they are happy for me, but each of them would like to be in my place. Once, between takes, I fell asleep in the same cell I was in. When I woke up, I had a panic attack. For a second it seemed to me that everything was real and they would not let me out again.
In a movie about gangsters, it is at this moment that something unpleasant happens to a minor character.
Cards are perhaps the only hobby that Sasa did not give up when starting a new life.
The Holy Virgin, football and a representative (albeit a former one) of organized crime - an exhaustively Italian mise-en-scene.
Outside of Italy, the Sicilian goat nostra is more known than the Camorra. But it is the clans of Naples and Campagna that are responsible for the largest number of deaths among Italian crime. Over the past 30 years, the “system”, as the Neapolitans themselves call the Camorra, has brought to the grave more than three thousand of its victims. That is, an average of one hundred people per year, of which the majority are residents of Naples, a city with a million inhabitants. This statistic, of course, pales in comparison with the tens of thousands of victims of Mexican or Colombian drug cartels, with only one amendment - overseas colleagues are deprived of the privilege of living and working in the heart of European democracy, a country from the G8. Camorra, on the other hand, operates only an hour by train from Rome and the Vatican, and ninety minutes by ferry from the millionaire paradises of Capri or Ischia.
Over the past two decades, the crime syndicate has experienced many dramatic moments: mass arrests, bloody wars for territory, betrayal of informers or just ordinary mafia soldiers who find themselves behind bars and are ready to sell their mother and all accomplices in exchange for a reduced sentence. Despite this, the Camorra continues to grow and expand - and is currently one of the most extensive criminal networks on the planet, with its own interest in drug trafficking, racketeering, business, politics, government projects. One of the main sources of income for the syndicate is the activity of waste collection companies, most of which are controlled by the Camorra, and the shameless development of government subsidies allocated to solve this classic Italian problem.
Sasa was born in the Spanish Quarter - Quartieri Spagnoli - one of the oldest districts of Naples. This labyrinth of narrow streets got its name in honor of the garrisons of Spanish mercenaries who lodged there in the 16th century on the occasion of the dispersal of popular unrest. Lively colorful quarter, typical for the historical center of the city. Children play football in the street, drying laundry hangs on the upper floors, hiding the sun from the townspeople; scooters hum everywhere, on which fearless teenagers - without helmets and four per motor vehicle - cut through the ancient pavements. Aborigines hang out at their porches, discussing business, gesticulating frantically - the Italian south, like in a movie or in a picture.
They said he was weak. And he, in order to prove that he was not weak, promised to kill the first person he met. They were the postman.
While walking in the company of Sasa, i quartieri - as the locals call their quarter - turns into much more gloomy tones; first of all - thanks to the off-screen commentary of the ex-gangster. Stricken by poverty, unemployment, juvenile delinquency and unsanitary conditions, the district has long served as the headquarters of the Camorra. “See the holes in the wall under the balcony? Striano points at the wall of the house. - It's from bullets. Every time the fighters of the enemy clan passed by, they took out their guns and fired at random.
Short, rather intelligent, Sasa, at first glance, does not fit the stereotype of a gangster. But this is only for the first. Wrinkles and scars, indecipherable expression of eyes, harsh mannerisms; smokes one after another, endlessly scanning the surroundings, as if expecting an avenger with a Kalash to jump out from around the corner. In one of his recent films - the famous "Gomorrah" - Sasa played a ruthless Camorrist who cracked down on his own. That is, by and large, himself. “We called this street the tunnel of death,” the actor says in a casual tone, inviting you to look into the skinny isthmus between the houses. “She has no lanes, so there is nowhere to run. Ten people were killed here.”
Sasa nods at the three grumpy dudes lounging on the corner and says they're guarding the piazza, a drug dealer. The drug trade is one of the syndicate's main sources of income. The brains of the operation are based in the notorious dormitory north of Naples, where more drugs are bought and sold than anywhere else in the European Union, according to anti-narcotics authorities. The police say that the daily income of gangsters from the drug trade is half a million euros. Trade goes on in the light of day, in full view of all; piazzas operate according to the laws of military discipline, have a strict hierarchy and an unlimited budget.
“A small piazza can generate between thirty and forty thousand euros a day. I heard people say that big piazzas make one and a half million a week, says Gennaro, a former piazza capo. - Personally, on a good day, I earned from three to four thousand. That's why the "system" never runs out of hands. Imagine, you were born and raised in the ass of the world, without any hope for a normal future, and every day you have to see how a camorrist drives around in an expensive car or bike in branded clothes, with shmars hanging on his sleeves. You want to live like this."
Striano in Quartieri Spagnoli, where he was born, raised and robbed the first store.
Some five years ago, Sasa could safely walk these streets only surrounded by chaps and with his hand on the pistol grip.
Striano on the shores of the Tyrrhenian Sea, behind him is the extinct Vesuvius.
In another street, in the heart of i quartieri, a couple of mopeds are parked, with no visible locks or other security devices, despite the fact that the quarter is famous for its thieves. Sasa explains that these are the scooters of the Camorra militants, no one will dare to touch them. “A postman was shot here in broad daylight,” Sasa continues as we cross a small square. - Over the camorrist, who until that moment had never killed, they teased the sidekick, everyone was crooked. They said he was weak. And he, in order to prove that he was not weak, promised to bang the first comer. They were the postman. The guy walked up to him and shot him in the head.”
The offspring of a poor but honest proletarian family, Sasa did not get out of the streets from childhood and actually lived without the supervision of his parents - his father, who worked as a porter 12 hours a day, and his mother, who had to take care of her seriously ill daughter. Their quarter is near the port. For a small fee, Sasa delivered potential clients to prostitutes, guiding tourists through the dimly lit labyrinths of the Quartieri, and peddling counterfeit cigarettes, another lucrative Camorra business now completely supplanted by the drug trade.
The doors of the Camorra are always wide open.
She will give you a place to live, a job, a car, money.
She will help you solve problems and resolve conflicts.
When Salvatore was ten, he was approached by a gang of raiders. They needed a kid who could climb into the toy store's ventilation shaft. At night, Sasa climbed into the mine and opened the door from the inside. The store was emptied, and its assortment was towed to the right place on a gangster truck. A few days later, the boy was handed a bundle of banknotes, which he shared with his own gang. The local clan appreciated the composure with which the boy coped with his first task.
Striano was fourteen when he and another local gangster were driving somewhere in a Vespa and were stopped by the police. The Camorrist slipped Sasa three grams of cocaine, who told the police that the powder belonged to him. The adult bandit (the elder brother of Sasa's girlfriend) escaped the sentence, and the minor was briefly detained. The clan again did not disregard the endurance of the young fighter. “It’s not you who offer your services to the Camorra, she herself notices you and begins to check for lice. On that day, I passed another test - I proved that I was not drifting. Three days later, a senior comrade presented a promising recruit with a Vespa as a token of respect.
He was soon entrusted with delivering cocaine to customers. Sasu was seen with the clan members, a sure sign of trust, quickly deciphered by his friends and neighbors. At sixteen, he was already delivering kilograms of powder and was part of the elite group of accompanying the boss. Tom had to report daily to the police station, which made him especially vulnerable to hitmen from rival factions. “Of course, he couldn’t drag a gun to the police, and I, as a minor with no criminal record, could accompany him to the very site, clear the road and guard,” Striano recalls. “For the first time, when I carried a gun in my pocket, I experienced an indescribable feeling of power. ”
One day, when he was playing powder and playing cards at the house of another bandit, the police came to them. They found the gun of the owner of the house, who was threatened with five years in prison. Sasa, without thinking twice, took over the cannon; received a year of probation. “In the Camorra, such gestures are not ignored.” When he was seventeen, the bosses made an offer to Sasa to become an affiliato, a full-fledged member of the "system"; he and his friends were just sniffing coke and watching football on TV. A decent amount was attached to the proposal to join the ranks of organized crime. “To take the money meant to agree, since this money represented the first salary,” explains Striano. “From now on, the clan was my family. I took the money and became an affiliate. I felt like the strongest."
Unlike the Cosa Nostra, the Camorra does not have a single boss. The syndicate consists of seven dozen clans, endlessly entering into ghostly alliances with each other, only to quarrel again and continue territorial wars. As a rule, the clan is headed by one family, which establishes a strict hierarchy of groups, subgroups, and so on, like corporations. Each member of the clan has a specialty - be it drugs, racketeering, garbage collection, loan sharking, mokruha, money laundering or investments. Each clan has a combat unit; allied clans often borrow combat units from each other - it is easier for an unexposed killer to complete a task in a territory where he is not known.
Affiliates receive a monthly salary that can reach six figures. The rest live on a percentage of the profits. When an affiliato goes to jail, the clan pays for the services of a lawyer and financially supports the family of the camorrista. “Some are not happy with the fact that while they are galloping, a strange man will go to their house once a month. Therefore, in our clan, the money allowance was distributed to relatives by a gay - so that the guys in prison would not worry once again.
Over time, Sasa grew to a leadership role - he received a gang that dealt in drugs, raids and racketeering. Several of his close friends died during another inter-clan war for territory. Striano did not leave the house alone; advanced by the whole gang, holding a pistol in their hand, making their way through dangerous lanes, in each of which they could be ambushed. “We were walking around the block, paranoid, with guns drawn, ready to kill anyone. They did their work, went to the hut and sniffed some more - always together, day and night. The more coconut they got, the crazier they got. I have become a complete scumbag, there is no other way to say it.”
Today's Striano rejects the system, but is not ready to betray the people who serve it. This unwillingness is not dictated by the fear of possible revenge. Its cause is deeper, and its very existence explains much about the Camorra's enduring popularity and its place in the fabric of Neapolitan life. “In the quarters,” explains Sasa, “many people have been living on welfare for 15 years already. Having turned to the state for help, they beat their foreheads against closed doors. And the doors of the Camorra are always wide open. Sistema will give you housing, a job, a car, money. It will help you get a business permit, solve problems and resolve conflicts.”
After several months of searching, the Italian police found Striano in Spain, on the Costa del Sol, a popular resort haunt of Camorra lieutenants in exile. Exiled to his homeland, he was sentenced to 15 years, of which he served ten. His parents died while he was behind bars. Monica, with whom they have been married for 20 years (her uncle was a big Camorra boss), always despised his way of life, but stayed with him. In his fifth year in Rebibbia, another affiliato, serving a life sentence for murder, asked Striano if he would like to join the theater circle. Sasa agreed, just to be able to spend a couple of extra hours outside the cell. In parallel with classes in the circle, he began to visit the prison library. At first he read popular literature like The Godfather, but he quickly got bored with it; he himself knew very well "how it all really is. " “In the end, I discovered Shakespeare and Brecht and began to take the work of the circle more seriously. I was taken aback by the possibilities that acting offered. I could become anyone else. For the first time, I felt free while behind bars. I found all the answers in the literature. I shed a lot of tears and eventually came to terms with the mistakes I made.” They put on several plays in prison, including a simplified version of The Tempest. Taviani filmed Striano's partners in the prison troupe.
"Now I'm too famous to return to 'the system'.
After his release from prison, Salvatore, who decided to start a career as a professional actor, was visited by a representative of the most powerful Quartieri clan. The Camorra wanted to know why he had abandoned old friends. “I felt that the clan was watching me to understand how serious my determination was to break with the past,” recalls Striano. He collected all his weapons, put them in a duffel bag, and paid a visit to the old bosses. “I put the trunks on the table and said: I’m returning them, I don’t need them anymore. He explained that he had paid all his debts to society and the clan and decided to unfold his fate. I managed to get out of the game, because all these long years in prison I was silent. Never stooped to squealing."
As bizarre as it is, Sasa's story is not unique. A curious new trend: Italian cinema, which has lost its international position since the days of Fellini, Mastroianni and Sophia Loren, is now slowly reclaiming it, not least thanks to the acting skills of the inhabitants of local prisons. For example, this year, one of the main contenders for the Cannes prize for best male role was the Neapolitan Aniello Arena, who brilliantly played a fishmonger in the film Reality, who dreams of getting into the Italian version of the Big Brother show. Arena, a former hitman who worked for the Camorra, is now serving a life sentence for his role in a contract killing of three people 20 years ago. He was brought to the site under escort, and returned to the cell for the night. In Cannes, where "Reality" eventually won the Grand Prix, and some critics in their praise of the aspiring actor reached comparisons with the young De Niro, the Arena was not released, despite the regime softened for good behavior. But the fact remains that the main roles in the two main Italian films of this year, without saying a word, were played by two former camorristas.
In the Spanish Quarter, where Sasu Camorrista is still remembered, he is now welcomed as a hero. People approach a local celebrity and ask if he can do anything to help their children have a happier future. He was recently offered his first non-crime role. “Someone even wrote to me on Facebook that Italy is proud of me. If you keep in mind my past, it sounds ridiculous. After Berlin, I am sure that I really quit. I can't turn back the clock and blot out my bandit exploits, but my example proves that life after the Camorra is possible. Now I'm too famous to return to the "system". They won't take me back even if I ask."
Photo: SERGIO RAMAZZOTTI/parallelozero
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Tegigq August 2012 AVIBUVANKA MONEY Two stemoles of wonderful people
90,000 transfer to English, synonyms, antonyms, sample proposals, meaning, phrase That that you are tired and not meaning that you can forget about the danger | Just because you're exhausted and disoriented doesn't mean you can stop looking out for trouble. | |
Howard feels that you're fed up with the usual02 affairs and are looking for calm, undemanding company | 're looking for a quiet, undemanding company. | |
Oh, I'm sorry that you're tired of waiting. | l'm sorry you got sick of waiting. | |
I know you're tired Pete, but what good is it if I feel bad for you? | I know you're tired , Pete, but I can't do you no good fretting about it. | |
Look, I know that you are is tired of , but just imagine how good it will be for you tomorrow when you wake up and see brand new paper on the shelves! | Look, I know you're tired , but just think how good you're gonna feel tomorrow when you wake up and we have new shelf paper! | |
Also, if you are in pain, hungry or tired your frontal lobe is the part of your brain that needs to send a question to your amygdala in time Are you sure that does he have a gun? | Furthermore, if you're in pain, if you're hungry, if you're exhausted, your frontal cortex is not going to work as well, part of the brain whose job it is to get to the amygdala in time saying, Are you really sure that's a gun there? | |
This is so important because because we live - which, of course, you are already tired of hearing about - in a global community where everyone is interconnected and dependent on each other, where the results of elections abroad can and will affect our lives, and it does not matter who we are and in what country we live. | And that's so very important because we live, as no doubt you're sick of hearing people tell you, in a globalized, hyperconnected, massively interdependent world where the political decisions of people in other countries can and will have an impact on our lives no matter who we are, no matter where we live. | |
I'm so tired of hearing from you at parties like the one that had a couple of weeks ago in Aspen about how unfortunate the Gamergate scandal is when you make billions of dollars playing games that maim and humiliate women for the sake of sports. | I'm so tired of hearing you talk to me at cocktail parties - like you did a couple weeks ago in Aspen - about how deplorable #Gamergate was, when you're still making billions of dollars off games that maim and dump women for sport. | |
I'm generally happy with my room, but I wish I had a small TV because because I'm tired of the soap operas my parents watch. | Generally I'm pleased with my room but I wish I had a small TV - set, because I'm tired of soap operas that my parents use to watch. | |
On the first day I was very tired and, unfortunately, I was unable to do anything. | The first day I was very tired and, unfortunately, was not capable of doing something. | |
What causes a decrease in lung volume, tachycardia, fatigue stomach pain, insomnia and rash? | What causes low lung volume, Heart palpitations, fatigue, stomach pain, Insomnia, and a rash? | |
Until migraines and chronic fatigue got so bad that I couldn't work anymore. | Until the migraines and chronic fatigue got so bad I couldn't work anymore. | |
The jester decided to guard first, despite the fact that that deep wrinkles cut through his forehead fatigue . | The Fool took first watch despite the lines of strain in his face. | |
I am tired , that I am treated like a village idiot. | I'm sick and tired of being treated like the village idiot. | |
He was worried that now he always felt tired , unless he was furious. | He was tired - he was alarmed to find that he was always tired now, unless he was in the grip of one of his rages. | |
The wife was so tired of her husband's infidelities, that teamed up with his mistress for revenge. | A wife gets so tired of her husband cheating that she teams up with his mistress for revenge. | |
Evil tongues said that he was tired of the fact that that success was not his lot. | Some of the more malicious said his fatigue was partly due to the fact that he himself had not been the sensation. | |
Is it his flirting or am I just tired of two men, what do I have? | Was it the flirting, or was I just tired of the two men in my life? | |
She was afraid that fatigue would make her cry again, but she didn't want to at all. | She was afraid weariness would make her cry again, and she didn't want that at all. | |
I know that you are tired and some think that it is useless to apply to the legislature. | I know you're tired , and some think it's pointless to go back to the legislature. | |
All these yawns and stories about that It is too tired for lunch ... | All the Yawning and Saying SheS Too 9014 for Dinner ... ore Dinner ... Normal fatigue became so irrelevant for me that I was already beginning to get used to constant hysteria. | I was so far beyond simple fatigue that I was beginning to feel nicely adjusted to the idea of perma nent hysteria. |
We're tired of you sticking your nose into our business. | We're getting awfully tired of you perpetually sticking your face into our affairs | Her teacher said she'd been tired and sullen. |
Everyone understood that he was tired . | It was obvious to everybody that he was tired . | |
Maybe I'm tired of pretending that I don't care. | Maybe I'm tired of pretending that nothing bothers me. | |
I'm tired of what people all think. | I am tired of people thinking things. | |
I'm tired of stealing clients and throwing grenades. | I got tired of you stealing clients and throwing grenades. | |
I'm tired of being that I'm being manipulated. | I'm tired of being manipulated. | |
He's very tired about that everything around him feels so strange. | He gets so tired of everything feeling so strange. | |
Are you tired of dark and blue calendars? | Are you tired of dark and blue calendars? | |
We are tired of Indian spells about that Kashmir is an integral part of India. | We are tired of the Indian litany and mantra that Kashmir is an integral part of India. | |
Your boyfriend is tired of waiting for you and only that left. | Your boyfriend got tired of waiting for you and left just now. | |
I'm tired of being fooled by . | I'm tired of being strung along. | |
Because because I'm tired of being their guinea pig. | Because I got tired of being their guinea pig. | |
And we tell you now, that people are growing, people are learning, and that 0103 you do, they are angry, they are already tired of it. | And we tell you now, the people are rising up and learning what you're doing and they're angry, and they're tired of it | |
You are tired , think that you will sleep well. | Are you tired of thinking, that quiet night's sleep | |
Reform fatigue implies that Central and Eastern Europe needs a reprieve to catch its breath. | Reform fatigue implies that Central and Eastern Europe needs a respite to catch its breath. | |
So that there is a link between fatigue and metabolic predisposition to weight gain. Stress. Tired people are very stressed. | So there's a link between tiredness and the metabolic predisposition for weight gain: stress. Tired people are massively stressed. | |
I told that I was tired and we put the kids to bed and watched TV. | I said I was tired and... and we put the kids to bed, and we watched television. | |
I'm tired of that that all piled on the victim. | I'm just getting a little tired of everybody Piling on the victim. | |
It is only the second month of Donald Trump's presidency, but many Americans are tired of the scandals and are wondering what will happen in the next 46 months. | We are only in the second month of Donald Trump’s presidency, but many Americans have already tired of the drama, and are wondering what the next 46 months have in store. | |
I'm too tired , that would have something else to watch. | I am too tired to see any more. | |
Morgan Grimes was so tired of listening to Big Mike winding his mother's clock, that actually showed up for work on time. | Morgan Grimes is so tired of listening to Big Mike punch his mama's time clock that he actually showed up for work on time today. | |
In general, the Russians seem to be tired of constantly hearing that that their patriotic duty lies in their hatred of the Western world and the US in particular. | In general, Russians seem to be tiring of being told often it is their patriotic duty to dislike and loathe the Western world and the United States in particular. | |
It is quite understandable, , that a state whose society is war-weary and slowly recovering from a severe recession, is less interested in foreign policy. | It is understandable for states in the midst of public exhaustion with war and a slow economic recovery after the great recession to have less interest in foreign policy. | |
He may not even feel that he is hungry or 0102 tired . | He can't feel even that he's hungry or tired . | |
Was it a Freudian slip, campaign fatigue, or a deliberate attempt to reassure old NF soldiers that their boss hadn't gone astray? | Was it a Freudian slip, campaign fatigue, or a deliberate attempt to reassure old FN troopers that the chief had not gone astray? | |
Or, following the example of Boris Yeltsin, Putin can declare that he is tired and name a successor. | Or, like Boris Yeltsin before him, Putin might declare himself exhausted and nominate a successor. | |
I have a feeling, that you are both tired of this battle and somewhere deep down, you want it to stop. | I get the feeling that you're both tired of this battle and that somewhere deep down inside you want it to stop. | |
Nevertheless, as the Wall Street Journal notes, given the approach of winter, and the fact that people are already tired of the war, Putin has every chance to strengthen his position. | Still, the Journal argues that, as war fatigue sets in and the winter draws closer, Russia’s hand could strengthen. | |
This means that instead of working, talks tirelessly and eats fried donuts. | It means he spends more time yakking and scarfing down donuts than doing his job. | |
- Pilots fear that if they report fatigue they will face disciplinary action. | “People fear that if they report fatigue they will be subject to a disciplinary process. | |
I sat right before we got to Providence because my legs were tired. | I sat right before we got to Providence because my feet were tired . | |
I'm so tired , that I can't take a step. | I am so tired that I can't walk another step. | |
This may be related to debt ceiling fatigue - we already know what is, how could anything worse happen? | This could be due to “debt limit” fatigue – we have been here before, what’s the worst that could happen? | |
However, he continues to persist, despite the fact that that public sentiment is already showing signs of government fatigue. | Yet he persists, even though domestic public opinion seems to be showing alarming signs of weariness with the government. | |
But she was already tired of worrying. She had to worry that her son would be kidnapped and forced to be a child soldier. |