| Word of the Day for Wednesday, October 11, 2006 | ||
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| \nHypnagogic (sometimes spelled hypnogogic) ultimately derives from Greek hupnos, "sleep" + agogos, "leading," from agein, "to lead."
\nDictionary.com Entry and Pronunciation for hypnagogic \n |
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| “,1] ); //–> – Thomas Pynchon, “Nearer, My Couch, to Thee”, New York Times, June 6, 1993 . . .the phenomenon of hypnagogic hallucinations, or what Mr. Alvarez describes as “the flickering images and voices that well up just before sleep takes over.” His uncensored and uncensoring subconscious allows him to absorb the world around him and in him, and to spit it out almost undigested, as if he were walking around in a constant hypnagogic state. |
October 12, 2006
hypnagogic
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