(1) As he sits in Athens wondering when the International Monetary Fund is going to deliver another bailout, George Papandreou might be tempted to hum a few lines of Tired of Waiting for You.
(2) I was so tired I just used to fall asleep on my feet.
(3) According to articles presented by Breitbart, Clinton is tired and ailing.
(4) That may sound familiar to Tottenham fans, who grew tired with their team’s aimless, sideways passing under André Villas-Boas.
(5) I’m personally sick and tired of Pristina and Belgrade, because we’ve been victimised by high politicians.” Facebook Twitter Pinterest The bridge connecting the Albanian and Serb parts of Mitrovica.
(6) An example calculation of rolling resistance for a polyurethane tire is given in detail.
(7) The extent of inadequate rest has prompted fears that many people are too tired to do their jobs properly, with some so sleep-deprived their brains are as confused as if they had consumed too much alcohol.
(8) Do you not get tired of the mass surveillance in this country?” Finicum told reporters.
(9) We’re tired of answering these questions,” one woman said.
(10) I’m tired, man.” But he hopes that it might be done quickly.
(11) I, along with many others, am tired of this toxic propaganda.
(12) Further the diabetics claimed to be more tired and diabetic males had more sexual concerns.
(13) Apart from that, it’s becoming increasingly tiring to see people posing about how there is no point voting because it’s all rigged, the politicians are all the same and the rest.
(14) In any case, people had tired of combative rhetoric and wanted softer platitudes.
(15) There is no guarantee of surgical success with such an injury but Murray was tiring of the constant reliance on pain killers to get through tough matches.
(16) The concentrations of 1-NP and airborne particulates changed significantly in all examined areas in parallel with the rise and fall of the frequencies of studded tire use.
(17) Transposable and interspersed repetitive elements (TIREs) are ubiquitous features of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic genomes.
(18) The players come to Australia tired and exhausted already because they’ve been going since mid-November.” Another issue is the way the women treat their practice time.
(19) But when you're tired, you've played in 94 or 95 minutes, players choose power rather than technique, rather than placing it.
(20) On the return journey, the tired passengers exchange smuggling anecdotes and safety tips.
Wearily
Definition:
(adv.) In a weary manner.
Example Sentences:
(1) She responds a little wearily to this theme, pointing out that male political prisoners “don’t as a rule get asked that kind of question”, but she explains that her daughter was well prepared.
(2) "Whatever happens the Sunnis of Iraq are the biggest losers," the MP added wearily.
(3) "You have to understand what that's all about," he says, wearily.
(4) There is less drama here, because the decay is predictable and wearily gradual.
(5) As the Verisign report concludes wearily: "Undoubtedly, barring some major international law enforcement effort, this trend [to illegal activity] is likely to continue indefinitely."
(6) "There's been very little evidence over the last 60 years that these sleeping pills do any harm," he insists wearily.
(7) However, the lack of any questioning of the European commission’s position on the timeline surprised Brussels veterans, wearily used to displays of EU disunity.
(8) The sociologist Leon Feinstein’s study children’s developmental abilities at 22 months and then tracked their progress to adulthood will by now be wearily familiar to many, but it bears repeating.
(9) Jail and youth detention statistics in Australia paint a wearily familiar picture of Indigenous disadvantage but in the territory they are catastrophic.
(10) When I spoke to Zusi last month he wearily referenced "the hype" about him replacing Donovan, while never really believing there was going to be any other outcome than Donovan making the squad.
(11) In Uganda , liberals and politicians rolled their eyes and sighed wearily.
(12) Which just leaves the wearily familiar argument that "marriage lite" undermines the real thing, with its much-vaunted promise of stability for children (or at least, the ones whose respectably married parents don't end up divorced).
(13) I've become wearily accustomed to this over my time working with Assange: the vituperation heaped on my author, the scorn directed at me for giving him a platform.
(14) Dead prisoners do not win votes,” Deborah Coles, the director of the deaths in custody campaign group Inquest, says wearily, acknowledging that she is angry at the soaring numbers and exhausted by the lack of progress.
(15) A wearily familiar narrative is already in place: the Britain of the Daily Mail and Crap Towns , the Britain where nothing works any more.
(16) In his commentary, Robinson writes that Chaplin "can move without warning from the baldly colloquial to dazzling yet apparently effortless imagery, as when the crushed Calvero gazes 'wearily into the secretive river, gliding phantom-like in a life of its own … smiling satanically at him as it flecked myriad lights from the moon and from the lamps along the embankment'".
(17) I always say the people who are most certain about what the model will be are the furthest removed from any responsibility for actually making that model occur,” he says a touch world-wearily.
(18) ‘We’re just happy to have the work,” he shrugs wearily.
(19) "We respect their right to peaceful protest," she says, wearily, "but anyone can see that this is all about intimidation.
(20) Salmond, both in his morning speech and in conversation, seems wearily resigned to Scotland's mainstream media being anti-independence, but he would be wise to pay little heed to this.