somnambulism

సోమ్నాంబులిజం
definition
noun
In somnambulism and somniloquy, a child sits up in bed with eyes open but is ‘unseeing.’
sleepwalking.
example
At the same time, there are recent texts in which a representation of 'somnambulism' seems fused with the image of vertical slumber.
In 'somnambulism' and somniloquy, a child sits up in bed with eyes open but is ‘unseeing.’
Further information included the fact that the patient had no history of 'somnambulism' (sleep walking).
They are similar to other arousal disorders that occur during deep sleep, such as 'somnambulism' and confusional arousals.
Other names for it are walking during sleep and 'somnambulism' .
she would have liked to wake up from her 'somnambulism' to find herself back in bed
Visitors are always surprised to find the newsroom to be inert and 'somnambulant' - people murmuring on the phone, tapping at keyboards, conferring in hushed tones.
Juries have reason to be skeptical, but there is plenty of scientific evidence to suggest that sleepwalkers, or 'somnambulists' , can engage in complex behavior.
Before and beyond they are sleeping, 'somnambulists' - and, in fact, the physical appearance of Dix both in the first and last scene suggests this state.
Their debut album, The Acrobat, catches night-bruised piano-pop songs meandering into weary and 'somnambulistic' discord.
Songs like ‘Vesuvius’ and ‘Virginia’ amble along 'somnambulantly' , and ‘Forthright’ conjures a Gothic insomnia as Chesnutt wanders a lonely house contemplating death and hominy.
Obese, and buzzing 'somnambulantly' around a light bulb, they're easy to swat.
The central character, a Woman who works in a convenience store (played with 'somnambulistic' perfection by Maureen Gammelseter) is the the film's central focus.
As I was trolling the Internet the other night, (an addictive past-time especially for 'somnambulant' sleuths like me), I happened upon the ‘ultimate destination for women's fiction’.
After watching the Pope's funeral, I staggered 'somnambulantly' towards the Commons in search of breakfast.
Contemporary with early Surrealism, the people in Countries of the World remind Stezaker of the 'somnambulant' anonymous types in paintings by de Chirico, Delvaux and Magritte.
Saxe-Coburg still has time, but not much, to wake from his 'somnambulant' approach to profound economic and social challenges, and at least try to give the appearance of decisive leadership.
An outraged crowd readies to raze the community, but once again they do so without passion, 'somnambulistically' moving along, tending over the duties handed to them by chance.
No one really cares, and parading Congressional leadership out to 'somnambulantly' mouth focus-group platitudes doesn't do anything to help anyone but Congressional leadership.
In one painting, for example, a stout Leger-like woman, rigid and flat in form and stultified in motion, wanders 'somnambulistically' away from a voluptuously puffed red love seat.
It was not set up by 'somnambulists' who built it in their sleep.
Was the 'somnambulist' an ‘automaton’ or what some French psychologists called an automate conscient?
Fortunately the highlights of the trip outweigh the overly 'somnambulistic' detours, proving that it's the journey, not the destination that matters most.
While the British state, however reluctantly, was substantially increasing its involvement in Northern Ireland, the Irish government's approach was 'somnambulistic' .
Characters 'somnambulistically' move in and out of frames, ghosts of feeling and thinking human beings.
This 1960 film is the third work by Frank Tashlin to feature Jerry Lewis 'somnambulantly' broadcasting the treasures of his dreams; therefore, it's Tashlin's most psychoanalytic film to date.
The intense bitterness eventually gave way to a melancholic paralysis in which all, save the children, became walking-wounded 'somnambulists' lingering in dusty hallways awaiting blessed bedtime.
You have to feel the heavyweight, soft, supple, sensual cottons and 'somnambulistically' draping fabrics.
In the Resurrection, set in Piero's home town of Sansepolcro, Christ emerges 'somnambulistically' from a sarcophagus against which the sleeping guards lie - a strange and disturbing image.
Neither cinema's guileful cultural artifacts nor the 'somnambulistic' , moribund jargon that unpacks them know anything about that.
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