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  1. Dictionary
    tire
    /ˈtʌɪə/

    verb

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. TIRE definition: 1. to begin to feel as if you have no energy and want to rest or go to sleep, or to make someone…. Learn more.

  3. The meaning of TIRE is to become weary. How to use tire in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Tire.

  4. Oct 10, 2016 · A tyre (or tire) is a circular and ring-like part of a vehicle that comes in contact with the ground. Tyres are fitted on rims and filled with compressed air. Since their invention, natural rubber has been the most widely used material in the manufacturing of tyres.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TireTire - Wikipedia

    A tire ( North American English) or tyre ( Commonwealth English) is a ring-shaped component that surrounds a wheel's rim to transfer a vehicle's load from the axle through the wheel to the ground and to provide traction on the surface over which the wheel travels.

  6. to cause someone to lose energy, or to be without energy: [ I ] Weakened by the infection, he tires easily. [ T ] Running tired her. [ M ] Going up all those stairs tires me out. tire of. To tire of something is to become bored with it: Viewers never tire of nature programs.

  7. 1. verb. If something tires you or if you tire, you feel that you have used a lot of energy and you want to rest or sleep. If driving tires you, take the train. [VERB noun] He tired easily, though he was unable to sleep well at night. [VERB] Synonyms: exhaust, drain, fatigue, weary More Synonyms of tire. 2. verb [no passive]

  8. noun. a ring or band of rubber, either solid or hollow and inflated, or of metal, placed over the rim of a wheel to provide traction, resistance to wear, or other desirable properties. a metal band attached to the outside of the felloes and forming the tread of a wagon wheel.

  9. To tire is to grow weary or bored with something. As a noun, a tire is the large, rubber ring that surrounds a car's wheel. You might tire from the hard work of changing a flat tire. When you tire, you need rest, or sometimes just a break: "When I tire of working on my homework, I like to read a book or watch TV for a while."

  10. a thick rubber ring, often filled with air, that is fitted around the outer edge of the wheel of a vehicle, allowing the vehicle to stick to the road surface and to travel over the ground more easily: I've got a flat tyre (= the air has gone out of it). He was driving along the motorway when his tyre burst.

  11. 1. A covering for a wheel, usually made of rubber reinforced with cords of nylon, fiberglass, or other material and filled with compressed air. 2. A hoop of metal or rubber fitted around a wheel. [Middle English, iron rim of a wheel, probably from tir, attire, short for atire, from attiren, to attire; see attire .] tire 3. (tīr) Archaic.