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    wide-a·wake
    /ˌwīdəˈwāk/

    noun

    • 1. a soft felt hat with a low crown and wide brim.

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. Someone who is wide awake is fully awake and unable to sleep. I could not relax and still felt wide awake. Synonyms: conscious , fully awake , roused , wakened More Synonyms of wide awake

  3. The meaning of WIDEAWAKE is a soft felt hat with a low crown and a wide brim. How to use wideawake in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Wideawake.

  4. Definitions of wide-awake. adjective. fully awake. “so excited she was wide-awake all night”. synonyms: unsleeping. awake. not in a state of sleep; completely conscious. adjective. fully alert and watchful.

  5. Wide-awake definition: fully awake; with the eyes wide open.. See examples of WIDE-AWAKE used in a sentence.

  6. The idiom “wide awake” is often used to describe someone who is paying close attention or who is particularly observant. For example, you might say that a detective was wide awake during an investigation or that a student was wide awake during class.

  7. 1. conscious, fully awake, roused, wakened I could not relax and was still wide awake after midnight. 2. alert, vigilant, on the ball (informal), aware, keen, wary, watchful, observant, on the alert, on your toes, on the qui vive, heedful You need to stay alert and wide awake to avoid accidents as you drive.

  8. How to use . wide-awake in a sentence"Here come the Austrians," whispered one boy to another, as he gazed at the gray wide-awakes and knapsacks.

  9. What does the word wide awake mean? There are six meanings listed in OED's entry for the word wide awake, one of which is labelled obsolete. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definitions, usage, and quotation evidence. wide awake has developed meanings and uses in subjects including. birds (1830s) hats (1830s) See meaning & use.

  10. Some common synonyms of wide-awake are alert, vigilant, and watchful. While all these words mean "being on the lookout especially for danger or opportunity," wide-awake applies to watchfulness for opportunities and developments more often than dangers.

  11. Fully awake; also, very alert. For example, He lay there, wide awake, unable to sleep, or She was wide awake to all the possibilities. The wide in this idiom alludes to the eyes being wide open. [Early 1800s]

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