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  2. Sep 28, 2017 · Proto-Germanic *lata- (source also of Old Norse latr "sluggish, lazy," Middle Dutch, Old Saxon lat, Dutch laat, German laß "idle, weary...," Gothic lats "weary, sluggish, lazy," latjan "to hinder"), from PIE *led- "slow, weary," from root *‌‌lē- "to let go, slacken...

  3. WEER-ee. See pronunciation. Where does the adjective weary come from? Earliest known use. Old English. The earliest known use of the adjective weary is in the Old English period (pre-1150). It is also recorded as a verb from the Old English period (pre-1150). weary is a word inherited from Germanic. See etymology.

  4. Weary comes from the Old English word werig, meaning "tired." It can also describe being extremely bored and sick of something, like on a long drive, you might grow weary of your father's singing voice.

  5. Lassitude comes from the Latin word lassus, meaning “weary.”. Our English spelling comes from the French word that developed directly from Latin, borrowed in the 15th century. In French, the word las (masculine) or lasse (feminine) means “weary” or “tired,” and the idiom être las de means “to be sick and tired of.”.

  6. bored by something because you have experienced too much of it: grow weary of I've been going out with the same people to the same places for years and I've just grown weary of it. See more. causing you to feel tired, bored, or annoyed: The whole sequence of events had a weary familiarity to it.

  7. Oct 23, 2021 · According to Etymonline, the word weary comes from the Middle English wery/Middle English werien and Old English werig/Old English wērig/Old English wēr meaning “tired, exhausted, miserable, or sad.”

  8. bored by something because you have experienced too much of it: grow weary ofI've been going out with the same people to the same places for years and I've just grown weary of it. See more. causing you to feel tired, bored, or annoyed: The whole sequence of events had a weary familiarity to it.