awaken
/əˈweɪkən/ (bre, ipa) · /əˈweɪkən/ (ame, ipa) · /ə-ˈwā-kən/ (ame, mw)
awaken — verb
1. to come out of sleep, or to bring another person out of sleep, often gently or i
to come out of sleep, or to bring another person out of sleep, often gently or in a quiet way.
Camille awakened just before dawn and listened to the rain on the roof.
intransitive: awaken at a time of day
The smell of fresh bread awakened Bao from a long, deep sleep.
transitive: noun + awaken + person + from sleep
Please don't awaken the baby — she only fell asleep ten minutes ago.
The hikers awakened at first light and packed their tents quickly.
A loud crash in the kitchen awakened everyone in the small farmhouse.
- fall asleep
the opposite action: drifting into sleep
- doze off
informal: to start sleeping unintentionally
文法句型
awaken (someone)
awaken from + noun
用法筆記
More formal and literary than 'wake up'. Common in novels, news, and written narration; less common in everyday speech, where 'wake up' is the natural choice.
常見錯誤
2. to cause a feeling, memory, or interest to arise in someone — for example, a son
to cause a feeling, memory, or interest to arise in someone — for example, a song bringing back childhood memories, or a teacher sparking curiosity in a student.
The old photograph awakened painful memories of Jin's grandmother.
transitive: thing + awaken + memory/feeling
Mr. Patel's lessons awakened a deep love of poetry in many of his students.
pattern: awaken + feeling + in + person
The documentary awakened public concern about the river's dying fish.
A new curiosity about her family's past slowly awakened in Sara.
文法句型
awaken + feeling/memory/interest (in someone)
feeling + awaken (in someone)
用法筆記
Distinguish from sense 1: this sense takes an abstract object (memory, feeling, interest) rather than a person or animal. Often appears in formal writing, journalism, and reflective prose.