English » Polish

wake1 <woke, woken [or -ed, -ed]> [weɪk] VB trans, intr

to wake [up]
budzić [perf o-] [się]

wake3 [weɪk] N

1. wake (before funeral):

2. wake (after funeral):

stypa f

Usage examples with waking

for fear of waking the baby

Monolingual examples (not verified by PONS Editors)

English
His fondness for fine dining led him to be caricatured as a bloated voluptuary, usually dressed in a nightshirt and sleeping cap, waking only to eat.
en.wikipedia.org
What we consider grogginess is actually a hybrid form of consciousness -- half waking and half dream.
www.huffingtonpost.com
He has hallucinations about what it must be like to freeze to death, dozing and waking alternately.
en.wikipedia.org
The story begins with the character's sudden waking from midnight slumber.
en.wikipedia.org
The cinema's janitor came in, waking and telling them the film was over and all the audiences had left.
en.wikipedia.org
For waking late, he is forced to clean the guardhouse, but this is minor punishment compared to others mentioned in the book.
en.wikipedia.org
He served the poor and the rich without distinction, often waking up at unearthly hours.
en.wikipedia.org
A great-looking app tracks your sleep and the quality of said shut-eye, before gently waking you up with a vibrating silent alarm.
www.gizmodo.com.au
Children who sleep through the night and have few night waking episodes have higher cognitive attainments and easier temperaments than other children.
en.wikipedia.org
The serpent slowly uncoiled without waking up the boy and descended from the boulder.
en.wikipedia.org

Would you like to add some words, phrases or translations?

Submit a new entry.

Choose your language Deutsch | English | Español | Français | Italiano | Polski | Português | Русский | Slovenščina