Wakefulness
91wakeful — [[t]we͟ɪkfʊl[/t]] ADJ GRADED Someone who is wakeful finds it difficult to get to sleep and wakes up very often when they should be sleeping. Wakeful babies will often continue to need little sleep as they grow older. Derived words: wakefulness N… …
92γρηγορήσεις — γρηγόρησις wakefulness fem nom/voc pl (attic epic) γρηγόρησις wakefulness fem nom/acc pl (attic) γρηγορέω to be aor subj act 2nd sg (epic) γρηγορέω to be fut ind act 2nd sg …
93διαγρηγοροῦντι — διαγρηγορέω start into full wakefulness pres part act masc/neut dat sg (attic epic doric) διαγρηγορέω start into full wakefulness pres ind act 3rd pl (doric) …
94διαγρηγορήσαντα — διαγρηγορέω start into full wakefulness aor part act neut nom/voc/acc pl διαγρηγορέω start into full wakefulness aor part act masc acc sg …
95διαγρηγορήσατε — διαγρηγορέω start into full wakefulness aor imperat act 2nd pl διαγρηγορέω start into full wakefulness aor ind act 2nd pl (homeric ionic) …
96Agrypnotic — Ag ryp*not ic, n. [Gr. ? sleepless; ? to chase, search for + ? sleep: cf. F. agrypnotique.] Anything which prevents sleep, or produces wakefulness, as strong tea or coffee. [1913 Webster] || …
97Daymare — Day mare (d[=a] m[^a]r ), n. [Day + mare incubus.] (Med.) A kind of incubus which occurs during wakefulness, attended by the peculiar pressure on the chest which characterizes nightmare. Dunglison. [1913 Webster] …
98hypnosis — Mesmerism Mes mer*ism, n. [From Mesmer, who first brought it into notice at Vienna, about 1775: cf. F. mesm[ e]risme.] An earlier name for {hypnosis} or {hypnotism}, the art of inducing an extraordinary or abnormal state of the nervous system, in …
99hypnotism — Mesmerism Mes mer*ism, n. [From Mesmer, who first brought it into notice at Vienna, about 1775: cf. F. mesm[ e]risme.] An earlier name for {hypnosis} or {hypnotism}, the art of inducing an extraordinary or abnormal state of the nervous system, in …
100Insomnia — In*som ni*a, n. [L., fr. insomnis sleepless; pref. in not + somnus sleep.] Lack of sleep; inability to sleep, especially when chronic; wakefulness; sleeplessness. [1913 Webster] …