Sleep
in sentence
1612 examples of Sleep in a sentence
That way, my aunt could
sleep
much better at night without having to worry about my grandfather's wandering.
Testing the device on a number of patients made me realize that I needed to invent solutions for people who didn't want to wear socks to
sleep
at night.
There's all kinds of psychological challenges: how to keep a team together in these circumstances; how to deal with the warping of time you start to sense when you're living in these circumstances;
sleep
problems that arise; etc.
And I told my mother and I told my wife and also Melanie, and I said, "It looks like we're going to have to drive a little bit further down the road to be able to
sleep
tonight."
And so we had a great
sleep
that night.
The other symptoms could come from the first slide or from those on the second slide, including symptoms like feeling out of control and changes in
sleep
or appetite.
You know that children
sleep
better in noise.
They don't
sleep
in a quiet space.
And you also have to
sleep
on 42-degree slopes and really hope that there won't be any earthquake that night.
Because I'm the one who can't
sleep
at night thinking about it.
That Julia Roberts, if she'd ever had to
sleep
with a man to put a few pounds in her pocket, I don't think she'd ever have made that film.
It was done When the benediction had been sung Firelight gently woke us from our golden night My surprise I can turn to see your open eyes And I know You are alive I know that smile Nothing more In the after There is waking from your
sleep
And your lover Is the only face you see We are after Ever after There is laughter Afterneath The war Nobody ever even asked what for Up above Nothing matters but the ones you love So get out with me Now you've got enough with me Just the two of us you see And nothing more In the after There is waking from your
sleep
And your lover Is the only face you see We are after Ever after There is laughter Afterneath Oh, we after Ever after There is laughter Afterneath Oh Oh Oh Oh Thank you.
If it doesn't matter to you who I
sleep
with, then you cannot imagine what it feels like when I walk down the street late at night holding her hand, and approach a group of people and have to make the decision if I should hang on to it or if I should I drop it when all I want to do is squeeze it tighter.
You could imagine it would be quite difficult to
sleep
in that situation, even as a passenger.
When I went to sleep, the next day it wasn't there.
I've offered to marry her so I could
sleep
there, but she said I didn't have to do that.
We can't afford the fanciest places to stay at night, so we tend to
sleep
a lot outdoors.
It demands colossal patience, all this growing small: your diminished
sleep
at night, your handwriting, your voice, your height.
How about
sleep
deprivation?
Let's look at an example that has been popularized in the media, and it has to do with the
sleep
aid Ambien.
Ambien was released on the market over 20 years ago, and since then, hundreds of millions of prescriptions have been written, primarily to women, because women suffer more
sleep
disorders than men.
The prison radically restricted communication and used
sleep
deprivation, and constant light for so-called "ideological conversion."
So the next morning, when I woke up on too little sleep, worrying about the hole in the window, and a mental note that I had to call my contractor, and the freezing temperatures, and the meetings I had upcoming in Europe, and, you know, with all the cortisol in my brain, my thinking was cloudy, but I didn't know it was cloudy because my thinking was cloudy.
For example, they are not allowed to buy a bus ticket or to rent a hotel room, so many families literally
sleep
in the streets.
They have found a patch of shade under the palm trees under which to let their babies sleep, while they doze but remain vigilant.
He ended up working as a croupier in a Beirut casino where I later found him, because he couldn't sleep, so it was quite a suitable job.
They suddenly don't want to sleep, because when they do, they have the same nightmare every night.
Would they talk on the phone, listen to music, draw pictures,
sleep?
Do you remember when you used to beatbox me to
sleep?
It sounds like a Stephen King movie, but it's actually a medical condition called
sleep
paralysis, and about half of the population has experienced this strange phenomenon at least once in their life.
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