AWAKE vs SLEEP: NOUN
- N/A
- In botany, nyctitropism, or the sleep-movement of plants, a condition brought about in the foliar or floral organs of certain plants, in which they assume at nightfall, or just before, positions unlike those which they have maintained during the day.
- Specifically, in zoology, the protracted and profound dormancy or torpidity into which various animals fall periodically at certain seasons of the year.
- Repose; rest; quiet; dormancy; hence, the rest of the grave; death.
- A period of sleep: as, a short sleep.
- A state of general marked quiescence of voluntary and conscious (as well as many involuntary and unconscious) functions, alternating more or less regularly with periods of activity.
- The folding together of leaflets or petals at night or in the absence of light.
- A state in which a computer shuts off or reduces power to its peripherals (such as the display or memory) in order to save energy during periods of inactivity.
- A state of inactivity resembling or suggesting sleep; unconsciousness, dormancy, hibernation, or death.
- A period of this form of rest.
- A natural periodic state of rest for the mind and body, in which the eyes usually close and consciousness is completely or partially lost, so that there is a decrease in bodily movement and responsiveness to external stimuli. During sleep the brain in humans and other mammals undergoes a characteristic cycle of brain-wave activity that includes intervals of dreaming.
- A natural and periodic state of rest during which consciousness of the world is suspended
- A torpid state resembling sleep
- A period of time spent sleeping
- Euphemisms for death (based on an analogy between lying in a bed and in a tomb)
- A crust of dried tears or mucus normally forming around the inner rim of the eye during sleep.
AWAKE vs SLEEP: ADJECTIVE
- Fully alert; attuned. : aware.
- Completely conscious; not in a state of sleep.
- Not sleeping or lethargic; roused from sleep; in a state of vigilance or action.
- Not asleep; conscious.
- Alert, aware.
- Not in a state of sleep; completely conscious
- Mentally perceptive and responsive
- N/A
AWAKE vs SLEEP: VERB
- To become conscious after having slept.
- To cause (somebody) to stop sleeping.
- To excite or to stir up something latent.
- Stop sleeping
- Be asleep
- Be able to accommodate for sleeping
AWAKE vs SLEEP: INTRANSITIVE VERB
- To become aware or cognizant.
- To become alert.
- To wake up.
- To stir up (memories, for example).
- To make aware of.
- To cease to sleep; to come out of a state of natural sleep; and, figuratively, out of a state resembling sleep, as inaction or death.
- To rouse from sleep; waken.
- To be dead; to lie in the grave.
- To provide sleeping accommodations for.
- To pass or get rid of by sleeping.
- To be careless, inattentive, or uncouncerned; not to be vigilant; to live thoughtlessly.
- To take rest by a suspension of the voluntary exercise of the powers of the body and mind, and an apathy of the organs of sense; to slumber.
- To be in a condition resembling sleep.
- To be in the state of sleep or to fall asleep.
AWAKE vs SLEEP: TRANSITIVE VERB
- To rouse from a state resembling sleep, as from death, stupidity., or inaction; to put into action; to give new life to; to stir up
- To rouse from sleep; to wake; to awaken.
- To spend in sleep.
- To become free from by sleep.
- To be slumbering in; -- followed by a cognate object.
- To give sleep to; to furnish with accomodations for sleeping; to lodge.
AWAKE vs SLEEP: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Not in a state of sleep
- Synonyms To wake, excite, stir up, call forth, stimulate, spur (up).
- To arouse from a state resembling sleep, as from death, stupor, or inaction; put into action or new life: as, to awake the dead; to awake the dormant faculties.
- To arouse from sleep.
- To be or remain awake; watch.
- To bestir or rouse one's self from a state resembling sleep; emerge from a state of inaction; be invigorated with new life; become alive: as, to awake from sloth; to awake to the consciousness of a great loss.
- To come into being or action as if from sleep.
- To cease to sleep; come out of a state of natural sleep.
- Roused from sleep; not sleeping; in a state of vigilance or action.
- Completely conscious
- To take the repose or rest which is afforded by a suspension of the voluntary exercise of the bodily functions and the natural suspension, complete or partial, of consciousness; slumber. See the noun.
- To fall asleep; go to sleep; slumber.
- To rest, as in the grave; lie buried.
- To be careless, remiss, inattentive, or unconcerned; live thoughtlessly or carelessly; take things easy.
- In botany, to assume a state, as regards vegetable functions, analogous to the sleeping of animals. See sleep, n., 5.
- To be or become numb through stoppage of the circulation: said of parts of the body. See asleep.
- A torpid state resembling deep sleep
- Imp. of Sleep. Slept.
- To afford or provide sleeping-accommodation for: as, a car or cabin that can sleep thirty persons.
- With off or out: To get rid of or overcome by sleeping; recover from during sleep: as, to sleep off a headache or a debauch.
- To lie or remain dormant; remain inactive or unused; be latent; be or appear quiet or quiescent; repose quietly: as, the sword sleeps in the scabbard.
- Drowse, Doze, Slumber, Sleep, nap, rest, repose. The first four words express the stages from full consciousness to full unconsciousness in sleep. Sleep is the standard or general word. Drowse expresses that state of heaviness when one does not quite surrender to sleep. Doze expresses the endeavor to take a sort of waking nap. Slumber has largely lost its earlier sense of the light beginning of sleep, and is now more often an elevated or poetical word for sleep.
- Synonyms and
- With away: To pass or consume in sleeping: as, to sleep away the hours; to sleep away one's life.
- To take rest in: with a cognate object, and therefore transitive in form only: as, to sleep the sleep that knows no waking.
- (idiom) (log/rock) To sleep very deeply.
AWAKE vs SLEEP: RELATED WORDS
- Arouse, Astir, Wake up, Aware, Watchful, Wake, Conscious, Alert, Alive, Insomniac, Awaken, Waken, Awakened, Waking, Sleepless
- Bunk, Insomnia, Bedtime, Asleep, Awake, Bed, Snooze, Doze, Eternal sleep, Quietus, Eternal rest, Rest, Slumber, Kip, Nap
AWAKE vs SLEEP: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Unsleeping, Arouse, Astir, Aware, Watchful, Wake, Conscious, Alert, Alive, Insomniac, Awaken, Waken, Awakened, Waking, Sleepless
- Bedroom, Sleepover, Sedation, Bunk, Insomnia, Bedtime, Asleep, Awake, Bed, Snooze, Doze, Eternal rest, Rest, Slumber, Nap
AWAKE vs SLEEP: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- Remains awake, calm and easily follows command Awake, calm and easily follows commands Awakens to loud verbal stimuli or gentle shaking.
- After the device is awake, it needs to wait for the sink to be awake before transmitting a packet.
- Usage awake and awaken are interchangeable but awaken is much rarer than awake as an intransitive verb.
- Guys chck my GPS Awake android simple gps navigation app that Awake you on the destination.
- People who are awake are considered conscious; anyone not awake is unconscious.
- He is awake but not awake because his world is a living nightmare.
- As the students try to keep themselves awake, Landon has a nightmare in class and stabs himself awake.
- So awake windows really mean the maximum amount of time that your LO can be awake for.
- Anaesthesia for awake craniotomy evolution of a technique that facilitates awake neurological testing.
- Awake, awake, put on strength, O arm of the Lord; awake, as in days of old, the generations of long ago.
- Sleep adolescence: results from a large J Sleep Res.
- JHS seniors The Sleep Judge State of Sleep Scholarship The Sleep Judge is pleased to announce their annual State of Sleep Scholarship.
- For more information about why you see your sleep pattern, tap or click the sleep record that shows your sleep pattern.
- Daily sleep diaries captured subjective ratings of the same sleep parameters, with the addition of sleep quality.
- This may affect your sleep quality as obesity can increase your risk of sleep apnea and more sleep loss.
- Such chronic sleep debt factors may limit the amount of time to get sleep, compromisedisorder, such as sleep apnea.
- Thus, it underestimates these sleep stages and overestimates light sleep, providing a picture of less quality sleep than actually obtained.
- She had three sleep studies done years apart showing normal sleep with absence of significant sleep disordered breathing.
- REM sleep and deep sleep were stable throughout the week, while light sleep increased as TST was longer.
- EEG delta power, a marker of sleep pressure is higher during sleep following sleep deprivation.
AWAKE vs SLEEP: QUESTIONS
- Is awake tracheal intubation underused in difficult airway management?
- What does the Bible say about being spiritually awake?
- How does Utnapishtim convince Gilgamesh to stay awake?
- Is worrying about falling asleep keeping you awake?
- Does amphetamine keep MacBooks awake in clamshell mode?
- When is awake intubation indicated in an emergency?
- Did you experiment with pseudoephedrine to stay awake?
- Is HMAS Canberra keeping Wentworth residents awake?
- What is the meaning behind the song Awake by the band Awake?
- How does DJ stay awake during the Awake-A-Thon challenge?
- Do you need a sleep mouthguard to treat sleep bruxism?
- How much sleep is needed to recover from sleep deprivation?
- How to stop negative sleep thoughts from affecting your sleep?
- How does the way you sleep affect your sleep quality?
- Do sleep medications help Alzheimer's patients sleep?
- How does interrupted sleep affect your sleep quality?
- Why is Naptime sleep less peaceful than nighttime sleep?
- How are sleep tests used to diagnose sleep disorders?
- How many hours of sleep do successful people sleep?
- How to induce sleep naturally with natural sleep aids?