Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Weather inquiry - Too tired, neither cold nor hot nor thirsty. What word should I fill in?

Too tired, neither cold nor hot nor thirsty. What word should I fill in?

Tired to death, shivering with cold, sweating with heat and smoking with thirst.

1. When we reached the top of the mountain, we were all sweating like a pig.

In winter, the whole world becomes a big refrigerator, the mountains are shivering with cold, the rivers are stiff with cold, and the air seems to be frozen.

The farmers are harvesting crops, and they are sweating like a pig.

It's so hot that people are sweating. He kept waving his fan.

Grandpa was exhausted after working in the field all day.

But he would rather let himself sweat than let his parents help him.

Extended data:

Tired, cold, hot and thirsty are all modifiers. Modifier is a kind of part of speech, used to modify declarative sentences.

She is a girl. (declarative)

She is a beautiful girl. (A declarative sentence with modifiers)

Modifiers are words that play the role of "sorting, modifying, modifying and polishing" in sentences, and adjectives, adverbs and other words and phrases with the above functions all belong to this category.

Modifier is a kind of part of speech, used to modify declarative sentences.

For example:

Green wheat seedlings, light willows, red peach blossoms, cool rivers, etc.

Green, light color, red and red are modifiers.