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The phrase "exactly tired" is not standard in written English and may sound awkward or unclear.
It could be used informally to emphasize a specific level of tiredness, but it is not commonly accepted.
Example: "After the long hike, I was exactly tired, not just a little fatigued."
Alternatives: "truly exhausted" or "completely worn out".
Exact(1)
And who now looks if not exactly tired, then like a player who really could do with simply taking a breath, spreading himself a little more thickly, concentrating not just on the big booming notes but the silences in between.
Similar(59)
Just tired.
The runners reported feeling exactly as tired as they would have felt running at their true pace, not at the pace they thought they were maintaining.
Naturally, she was attired in a Jane jungle outfit, and that didn't exactly keep tired businessmen away from the front orchestra seats -- or this freshman from N.Y.U.
I just tire easily.
She and Jay have never addressed her illness, a reticence that is not exactly strange but tiring.
He was thin and deeply tanned, and had a heavy-lidded expression that was not tired or bored, exactly, but profoundly listless.
"Back-room political dealing in Albany is exactly what New Yorkers are tired of and what Andrew Cuomo has perfected over nearly 30 years in Albany," said the spokesman, Barney Keller.
And the key words to the race were exactly that: Tire degradation.
Pinpoint where exactly your tire is leaking.
Viewers (and those who play them in front of the camera) quickly grow tired with a "text" when exactly the same things happen with every playthrough.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com