I'm always dog-tired after a day at the amusement park.Mom was dog-tired and needed a nap before dinner. TIRE OUT To exhaust, fatigue, or deplete the energy of someone or an animal. A noun or pronoun can be used between "tire" and "out. "These long meetings are starting to tire out the staff. DEAD TIRED Totally exhausted or fatigued. I was dead tired after working my third 12-hour shift in a row. SICK AND TIRED OF ( SOMETHING ) Exceedingly wearied by, bored of, or exasperated with something. I'm sick and tired of doing my boss's errands. If something doesn't change soon, I'm going to quit!
TIRE SOMEONE OUT to exhaust someone. The extra work tired him out a lot. Too much work will tire out the horses. BE / GET TIRED OF SOMETHING / DOING SOMETHING be/get bored or annoyed with something/doing something: We got tired of the country and we moved into town. DEAD ON ONE ' S FEET Extremely tired. Honestly, I’m dead on my feet.
Lazy INDOLENT. This word has been used to mean ‘slothful’, ‘lazy’, or ‘idle’ since at least the early eighteenth century. Interestingly, it originally meant ‘causing no pain’, as its etymology (literally, ‘not grieving’) testifies.