1. (v.i.)sleep to take the rest afforded by a suspension of voluntary bodily functions and the natural suspension, complete or partial, of consciousness; to ceasebeing awake.
2. sleep Bot. to assume, esp. at night, a state similar to the sleep of animals, marked by closing of petals, leaves, etc.
3. sleep to be dormant, quiescent, or inactive, as faculties.
4. sleep to allow one's alertness or attentiveness to lie dormant.
5. sleep to lie in death.
6. (v.t.)sleep to take rest in (a specified kind of sleep): to sleep the sleep of the innocent.
7. sleep to havesleeping accommodations for: This trailer sleeps three people.
8. sleep sleep around, to be sexually promiscuous.
Etymology: (bef. 900; (v.) ME slepen, OE slēpan, slæmacr;pan, slāpan, c. OHG
Definition of 'SLEEP'
Princeton's WordNet
1. (noun)sleep, slumber a natural and periodic state of rest during which consciousness of the world is suspended "he didn't get enough sleep last night"; "calm as a child in dreamless slumber"
2. (noun)sleep, sopor a torpid state resembling deep sleep
3. (noun)sleep, nap a period of time spent sleeping "he felt better after a little sleep"; "there wasn't time for a nap"
4. (verb)rest, eternal rest, sleep, eternal sleep, quietus euphemisms for death (based on an analogy between lying in a bed and in a tomb) "she was laid to rest beside her husband"; "they had to put their family pet to sleep"
5. (verb)sleep, kip, slumber, log Z's, catch some Z's be asleep
6. (verb)sleep be able to accommodate for sleeping "This tent sleeps six people"
5. (verb)SLEEP to be, or appear to be, in repose; to be quiet; to be unemployed, unused, or unagitated; to rest; to lie dormant; as, a question sleeps for the present; the law sleeps
6. (verb)SLEEP to be slumbering in; -- followed by a cognate object; as, to sleep a dreamless sleep
7. (verb)SLEEP to give sleep to; to furnish with accomodations for sleeping; to lodge
8. (verb)SLEEP a natural and healthy, but temporary and periodical, suspension of the functions of the organs of sense, as well as of those of the voluntary and rational soul; that state of the animal in which there is a lessened acuteness of sensory perception, a confusion of ideas, and a loss of mental control, followed by a more or less unconscious state
Definitions of 'SLEEP'
The New Hacker's Dictionary
1. SLEEP 1. [techspeak] To relinquish a claim (of a process on a multitasking
system) for service; to indicate to the scheduler that a process may be
deactivated until some givenevent occurs or a specified time delay
elapses.
2. In jargon, used very similarly to v.block; also in
sleep on, syn.: with block on. Often used to indicate that the
speaker has relinquished a demand for resources until some (possibly
unspecified) external event: “They can't get the fix I've been asking
for into the next release, so I'm going to sleep on it until the release,
thenstart hassling them again.”