exhausted
adjective
[ ɪɡˈzɔːstɪd ]
• very tired.
• "she returned home, exhausted from work"
Similar:
tired out,
worn out,
weary,
dog-tired,
bone-tired,
bone-weary,
ready to drop,
on one's last legs,
asleep on one's feet,
drained,
fatigued,
enervated,
debilitated,
spent,
jet-lagged,
out of breath,
breathless,
panting,
puffing,
puffed,
puffed out,
puffing and blowing,
gasping (for breath),
done in,
all in,
dead on one's feet,
beat,
dead beat,
shattered,
bushed,
fagged out,
knocked out,
wiped out,
running on empty,
zonked out,
worn to a frazzle,
frazzled,
bushwhacked,
knackered,
whacked (out),
shagged out,
jiggered,
wabbit,
pooped,
tuckered out,
fried,
whipped,
stonkered,
toilworn,
fordone,
buggered,
rooted,
Opposite:
fresh as a daisy,
raring to go,
• (of resources or reserves) completely used up.
• "Kirov spat, his patience suddenly exhausted"
Similar:
used up,
at an end,
consumed,
finished,
spent,
depleted,
empty,
drained,
impoverished,
bankrupt,
Opposite:
replenished,
restocked,
exhaust
verb
• make (someone) feel very tired.
• "her day out had exhausted her"
Similar:
tire out,
wear out,
overtire,
overtax,
fatigue,
weary,
tire,
drain,
run someone into the ground,
run someone ragged,
enervate,
sap,
debilitate,
prostrate,
enfeeble,
wear oneself to a shadow,
do in,
take it out of one,
wipe out,
fag out,
knock out,
shatter,
wear oneself to a frazzle,
frazzle,
nearly kill,
knacker,
poop,
tucker out,
root,
tiring,
wearying,
taxing,
fatiguing,
wearing,
enervating,
draining,
sapping,
debilitating,
arduous,
strenuous,
uphill,
onerous,
punishing,
demanding,
exacting,
burdensome,
gruelling,
back-breaking,
crushing,
crippling,
killing,
murderous,
hellish,
knackering,
exigent,
• use up (resources or reserves) completely.
• "the country has exhausted its treasury reserves"
Similar:
use up,
run through,
go through,
consume,
finish,
deplete,
expend,
spend,
dissipate,
waste,
squander,
fritter away,
empty,
milk,
drain,
suck dry,
impoverish,
blow,
bleed,
• expel (gas or steam) from or into a particular place.
• "you should never exhaust bathroom air into your attic"
Origin:
mid 16th century (in the sense ‘draw off or out’): from Latin exhaust- ‘drained out’, from the verb exhaurire, from ex- ‘out’ + haurire ‘draw (water), drain’.