wake+up
71ˌwake (sb) ˈup — phrasal verb same as wake Wake up! It s nearly ten o clock![/ex] Don t wake me up when you come in.[/ex] …
72wake-up — /ˈweɪk ʌp/ (say wayk up) Colloquial –noun 1. someone who is fully aware: *I m a wake up to your little game! –colleen mccullough, 1975. –phrase 2. take a wake up to, to understand; perceive the meaning or purpose of. Also, wake up …
73wake — 1. Awaken. Ala. To awaken someone, ho āla, ho ālahia. To wake suddenly, puoho. To wake up the child, ho āla i ke keiki. Wake, it is light, it is bright (UL 197), e ala, ua ao, ua mālamalama. 2. Prefuneral vigil. Anaina ho… …
74wake-up — adjective Date: 1946 serving to wake up < a wake up alarm > …
75wake — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. path, track, trail, swath; vigil, watch. See rear, interment, passage. v. [a]rouse, awake[n]; stir, excite, animate. See activity, excitement. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [A track] Syn. furrow, wash,… …
76wake up to — PHRASAL VERB If you wake up to something, you become aware of it. [V P P n] Lithuanians are waking up to a world of increasing shortages... [V P P n] People should wake up to the fact that people with disabilities have got a vote as well …
77wake up — I. awaken, rouse from sleep On Saturday I usually wake up around noon. I sleep in. II. be alert, stop daydreaming Wake up, Walter. It s your turn to deal the cards …
78wake — This word (from Germanic words meaning to watch ) refers to a vigil or watch over a corpse, between the time of aperson s death and the time of burial. In some places, a wake is a very solemn occasion for prayer and mourning; in other places,… …
79wake-up — I. ˈ ̷ ̷ˌ ̷ ̷ noun ( s) Etymology: from wake up, v. : flicker II. noun ( s) Etymology: from …
80wake — See: IN THE WAKE OF …