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The phrase "am worn out" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to express a state of exhaustion or fatigue, often after a long day or challenging experience.
Example: "After working two shifts in a row, I am worn out and need to rest."
Alternatives: "I am exhausted" or "I am drained."
Exact(5)
I do feel like I'm letting them down and am worn out by the end of the week.
If I try to tell her, 'Well, I don't feel like it today, I am tired, I am in pain, I am worn out,' she will still call me and say, 'All right, Mr. Quinn, let us try this or that instead.' She just encourages me continuously to keep on going, even when I don't want to".
Sarah laughed to herself, saying: after I am worn out, will I have pleasure, and my Lord old?
I am worn out, exhausted even.
When I have chemo I am worn out and liable to onslaughts out of left field, backaches and migraines, "spontaneous" fractures, fainting - a whole panoply, with more assortment than a shady salesman's wares.
Similar(55)
"I'm worn out," he told me.
"I was worn out," she told me.
"I was worn out," he said.
"I'm worn out," she said.
"We were worn out," says Nelson.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com