Definitions

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.

  • noun 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.
  • noun A period of this form of rest.
  • noun A state of inactivity resembling or suggesting sleep; unconsciousness, dormancy, hibernation, or death.
  • noun 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.
  • noun Botany The folding together of leaflets or petals at night or in the absence of light.
  • noun A crust of dried tears or mucus normally forming around the inner rim of the eye during sleep.
  • intransitive verb To be in the state of sleep or to fall asleep.
  • intransitive verb To be in a condition resembling sleep.
  • intransitive verb To pass or get rid of by sleeping.
  • intransitive verb To provide sleeping accommodations for.
  • idiom (log/rock) To sleep very deeply.

from The Century Dictionary.

  • noun 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.
  • noun A period of sleep: as, a short sleep.
  • noun Repose; rest; quiet; dormancy; hence, the rest of the grave; death.
  • noun Specifically, in zoology, the protracted and profound dormancy or torpidity into which various animals fall periodically at certain seasons of the year.
  • noun 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.
  • 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 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.
  • 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.
  • Synonyms and
  • 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.
  • To take rest in: with a cognate object, and therefore transitive in form only: as, to sleep the sleep that knows no waking.
  • With away: To pass or consume in sleeping: as, to sleep away the hours; to sleep away one's life.
  • 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 afford or provide sleeping-accommodation for: as, a car or cabin that can sleep thirty persons.

from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.

  • imp. of Sleep. Slept.
  • transitive verb To be slumbering in; -- followed by a cognate object.
  • transitive verb rare To give sleep to; to furnish with accomodations for sleeping; to lodge.
  • transitive verb to spend in sleep.
  • transitive verb to become free from by sleep.
  • intransitive verb 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.
  • intransitive verb To be careless, inattentive, or uncouncerned; not to be vigilant; to live thoughtlessly.
  • intransitive verb To be dead; to lie in the grave.

Etymologies

from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition

[Middle English slepe, from Old English slǣp; see slēb- in Indo-European roots.]

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Middle English slepen, from Old English slǣpan ("to sleep"), from Proto-Germanic *slēpanan (“to sleep”), from Proto-Indo-European *slab-, *slap-, *(s)lÁb- (“to hang loose, be limp”). Cognate with West Frisian sliepe ("to sleep"), North Frisian sliepen ("to sleep"), Dutch slapen ("to sleep"), German schlafen ("to sleep").

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License

From Middle English sleep, sleepe, from Old English slǣp ("sleep"), from Proto-Germanic *slēpaz (“sleep”), from Proto-Indo-European *lāb- (“to hang loose, be limp”). Cognate with West Frisian sliep ("sleep"), Saterland Frisian släipe ("sleep"), Dutch slaap ("sleep"), German Schlaf ("sleep").

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Examples

  • Wake up… brush teeth… shower… breakfast… school [sleep] … come home… watch t. v… do homework… here my parents argue… eat dinner…. watch t. v…. finish homework… sleep…

    krazililme Diary Entry krazililme 2004

  • "I want sleep child," said Miss Webster, "I want _sleep_, leave me alone."

    Emilie the Peacemaker Mrs. Thomas Geldart

  • Sometimes her voice breaks the stillness of my chamber in the darkness of night, for I never sleep -- my brain is _too hot for sleep_.

    Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 56, Number 347, September, 1844 Various

  • _A_ may go to sleep quicker than _B_, but cannot _do more sleep_ in a given time.

    Ethics 384 BC-322 BC Aristotle

  • In fundamental contrast with those saws which assume that sleep is disturbed by dreams, we hold the _dream as the guardian of sleep_.

    Dream Psychology Psychoanalysis for Beginners Sigmund Freud 1897

  • When we increase the hours of sleep, however, it does not follow that we actually _sleep_ more in the same proportion.

    The Young Woman's Guide William A. Alcott 1824

  • But this comment is for ANYONE who feels to be tired all the time and it doesn’t get better no matter how much sleep you get: talk to a doctor and get tested (via a sleep study) for sleep apnea (in the UK ’sleep apnoea’).

    The Question for the Day « Whatever 2006

  • But this comment is for ANYONE who feels to be tired all the time and it doesn’t get better no matter how much sleep you get: talk to a doctor and get tested (via a sleep study) for sleep apnea (in the UK ’sleep apnoea’).

    The Question for the Day « Whatever 2006

  • V. i.1 (121,2) If I may trust the flattering truth of sleep] The sense is, _If I may only trust the_ honesty _of sleep_, which I know however not to be so nice as not often to practise _flattery_.

    Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies Samuel Johnson 1746

  • III. iv.141 (479,5) You lack the season of all natures, sleep] I take the meaning to be, _you want sleep_, which _seasons_, or gives the relish to

    Notes to Shakespeare, Volume III: The Tragedies Samuel Johnson 1746

Comments

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  • Must get off wordie and get some!

    April 1, 2008

  • What was that again?

    April 11, 2008

  • This word sounds... familiar somehow...

    I don't quite remember what it is...

    September 28, 2009

  • See insomnia.

    September 28, 2009

  • Must rest now. NW US peaches are in; canning jam tomorrow.

    October 5, 2011