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somnolent. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
somnolent, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
somnolent in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
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English
Etymology
First attested in 1615. Borrowed from French somnolent, from Old French sompnolent, from Latin somnolentus, from somnus (“sleep”).
Pronunciation
Adjective
somnolent (comparative more somnolent, superlative most somnolent)
- Drowsy or sleepy.
- Synonyms: sleepbound, somniculous; see also Thesaurus:sleepy
1966 March, Thomas Pynchon, chapter 4, in The Crying of Lot 49, New York, N.Y.: Bantam Books, published November 1976, →ISBN, page 60:One minute she was gazing at a mockup of a space capsule, safely surrounded by old, somnolent men; […]
1990 September 25, Michiko Kakutani, “Just 30 Years Later, Updike Has a Quartet”, in The New York Times, →ISSN:[…] ; and in chronicling the passing parade of Harry's life, the books have also created a Kodachrome-sharp picture of American life - the psychic ups and downs, enthusiasms and reversals experienced by this nation as it moved from the somnolent 50's through the upheavals of the 60's and 70's into the uncertainties of the 80's.
1992 April 1, Bill Watterson, Calvin & Hobbes (comic):My tiger is deep
in somnolent sleep
dreaming of chases remembered!
His keen eyes are glinting!
He dreams of a sprinting
sambar who'll soon be dismembered!
- (dated) Causing literal or figurative sleepiness.
- Synonyms: soporific; see also Thesaurus:soporific
1999, Stephen King, The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon:As she reached toward the last few fiddleheads growing on the second hummock, her hand froze. She heard the somnolent buzzing of flies again.
Translations
drowsy
- Bulgarian: сънлив (bg) (sǎnliv)
- Catalan: somnolent
- Dutch: slaperig (nl)
- Finnish: uninen (fi), somnolentti
- French: somnolent (fr)
- Georgian: ძილიანი (ʒiliani), მთვლემარე (mtvlemare), მძინარე (mʒinare)
- German: schläfrig (de)
- Greek: νυσταγμένος (el) (nystagménos), γλαρωμένος (el) (glaroménos), νυσταλέος (el) (nystaléos), υπναλέος (el) (ypnaléos)
- Italian: sonnolento (it)
- Kurdish:
- Northern Kurdish: xewto (ku)
- Latin: somnolentus, soporus
- Maori: momoe
- Polish: senny (pl)
- Portuguese: sonolento (pt)
- Russian: засыпа́ющий (ru) (zasypájuščij), дре́млющий (ru) (drémljuščij), со́нный (ru) (sónnyj)
- Spanish: somnoliento (es)
- Ukrainian: сонний m (sonnyj), дрімливий m (drimlyvyj), сонливий m (sonlyvyj)
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Translations to be checked
Catalan
Etymology
Borrowed from Latin somnolentus.
Pronunciation
Adjective
somnolent (feminine somnolenta, masculine plural somnolents, feminine plural somnolentes)
- sleepy, drowsy
Further reading
French
Etymology
Inherited from Old French sompnolent, borrowed from Latin somnolentus.
Pronunciation
Adjective
somnolent (feminine somnolente, masculine plural somnolents, feminine plural somnolentes)
- drowsy, sleepy
Verb
somnolent
- third-person plural present indicative/subjunctive of somnoler
Further reading
Romanian
Etymology
Borrowed from French somnolent, from Latin somnolentus.
Adjective
somnolent m or n (feminine singular somnolentă, masculine plural somnolenți, feminine and neuter plural somnolente)
- sleepy
Declension