sleep
Americanverb (used without object)
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to take the rest afforded by a suspension of voluntary bodily functions and the natural suspension, complete or partial, of consciousness; cease being awake.
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Botany. to assume, especially at night, a state similar to the sleep of animals, marked by closing of petals, leaves, etc.
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to be dormant, quiescent, or inactive, as faculties.
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to be careless or unalert; allow one's alertness, vigilance, or attentiveness to lie dormant.
While England slept, Germany prepared for war.
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to lie in death.
They are sleeping in their tombs.
verb (used with object)
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to take rest in (a specified kind of sleep).
He slept the sleep of the innocent.
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to accommodate for sleeping; have sleeping accommodations for.
This trailer sleeps three people.
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to spend or pass in sleep (usually followed by away orout ).
to sleep the day away.
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to recover from the effects of (a headache, hangover, etc.) by sleeping (usually followed by off oraway ).
noun
verb phrase
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sleep together to be sexual partners; have a sexual relationship.
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sleep around to have sexual relations with many partners, especially in a casual way; be sexually promiscuous.
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sleep over to spend one or more nights in a place other than one's own home.
Two friends will sleep over this weekend.
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sleep out
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(especially of domestic help) to sleep away from one's place of employment.
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Chiefly Northern U.S. to sleep away from one's home.
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to sleep outdoors.
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sleep on to postpone making a decision about for at least a day.
to sleep on a proposal till the end of the week.
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sleep in
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(especially of domestic help) to sleep where one is employed.
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to sleep beyond one's usual time of arising.
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sleep with to have sexual relations with.
idioms
noun
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a periodic state of physiological rest during which consciousness is suspended and metabolic rate is decreased See also paradoxical sleep
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botany the nontechnical name for nyctitropism
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a period spent sleeping
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a state of quiescence or dormancy
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a poetic or euphemistic word for death
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informal the dried mucoid particles often found in the corners of the eyes after sleeping
verb
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(intr) to be in or as in the state of sleep
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(intr) (of plants) to show nyctitropism
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(intr) to be inactive or quiescent
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(tr) to have sleeping accommodation for (a certain number)
the boat could sleep six
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to pass (time) sleeping
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(intr) to fail to pay attention
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poetic (intr) to be dead
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to give (something) extended consideration, esp overnight
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A natural, reversible state of rest in most vertebrate animals, occurring at regular intervals and necessary for the maintenance of health. During sleep, the eyes usually close, the muscles relax, and responsiveness to external stimuli decreases. Growth and repair of the tissues of the body are thought to occur, and energy is conserved and stored. In humans and certain other animals, sleep occurs in five stages, the first four consisting of non-REM sleep and the last stage consisting of REM sleep. These stages constitute a sleep cycle that repeats itself about five times during a normal episode of sleep. Each cycle is longer that the one preceding it because the length of the REM stage increases with every cycle until waking occurs. Stage I is characterized by drowsiness, Stage II by light sleep, and Stages III and IV by deep sleep. Stages II and III repeat themselves before REM sleep (Stage V), which occurs about 90 minutes after the onset of sleep. During REM sleep, dreams occur, and memory is thought to be organized. In the stages of non-REM sleep, there are no dreams, and brain activity decreases while the body recovers from wakeful activity. The amount and periodicity of sleep in humans vary with age, with infants sleeping frequently for shorter periods, and mature adults sleeping for longer uninterrupted periods.
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See also non-REM sleep REM sleep
Other Word Forms
- antisleep adjective
- sleepful adjective
- sleeplike adjective
- undersleep verb (used without object)
Etymology
Origin of sleep
First recorded before 900; (for the noun) Middle English; Old English slēp (Anglian), slǣp, slāp; cognate with Dutch slaap, German Schlaf, Gothic slēps; (for the verb) Middle English slepen, Old English slēpan, slǣpan, slāpan, cognate with Old Saxon slāpan, Gothic slēpan
Example Sentences
Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.
"You see Connor's bed where he left it, nobody has ever slept in it since."
From BBC
"I don't think my dad slept that night and probably didn't sleep very well for a long time after," said Gabby.
From Barron's
In Paris, Guinean teenager Boubacar Camara, sleeping in a tent on the outskirts of the city, told AFP he had "no choice but to keep on going".
From BBC
"But I always came back to sleep here even in the cold weather with a bobble hat on and sweater and a woollen blanket."
From BBC
For those without homes sleeping on the streets, the cold snap has come as a huge shock.
From Barron's
Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.