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Discover LudwigThe phrase "weary from" is correct and can be used in written English.
It is typically used to describe physical or mental exhaustion or fatigue. Here is an example: "After a long day of hiking, I was weary from the challenging terrain and steep inclines."
Exact(59)
Arms grow weary from pushing the wheelchair.
THE soldiers were weary from marching.
She is 36, with eyes weary from weeping.
Wayne Gretzky, weary from today's practice, dropped to his knees.
Errol was still weary from his nighttime struggles.
Are you weary from repetition in your professional life or your personal life?
The Colts survived the onslaught that left the Ravens weary from all those wasted return yards.
The old man's organs, weary from having generated all men, were now drowning the universe.
Ms. Tymoshenko acknowledged that Ukrainians were weary from years of political instability.
"Children feel weary from trying to get our attention," Steiner-Adair said.
Similar(1)
The cliché of the season is that Americans are war-weary from our long slogs in Iraq and Afghanistan.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com