What is the difference between tired and wabbit?
tired | wabbit |
(tire)
In need of some rest or sleep.
Fed up, annoyed, irritated, sick of.
Overused]], [[cliché.
(computing) A self-replicating program that (unlike a virus or worm) does not infect host programs or documents and remains on the local computer rather than spreading across networks of computers.
As adjectives the difference between tired and wabbit
is that tired is in need of some rest or sleep while wabbit is (scotland) exhausted, tired.As a verb tired
is (tire).As a noun wabbit is
(humorous|childish|eye-dialect) rabbit or wabbit can be (computing) a self-replicating program that (unlike a virus or worm) does not infect host programs or documents and remains on the local computer rather than spreading across networks of computers.tired
English
Verb
(head)Adjective
(en-adj)- I'm tired of this
- a tired song