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Someone who walks about in their sleep
Answer for the clue "Someone who walks about in their sleep ", 12 letters:
somnambulist
Alternative clues for the word somnambulist
Word definitions for somnambulist in dictionaries
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ The husband agreed that he had been bewitched; he spoke like a somnambulist , in tones of grief.
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Somnambulist or The Somnambulist can refer to: a person who engages in somnambulism ( sleepwalking ) a term used in hypnosis to indicate someone of high enough suggestibility to follow suggestions without the need for a formal trance
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. someone who walks about in their sleep [syn: sleepwalker , noctambulist ]
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Somnambulist \Som*nam"bu*list\, n. A person who is subject to somnambulism; one who walks in his sleep; a sleepwalker; a noctambulist. Syn: somnambulator.
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. A person who walks about in his or her sleep; a sleepwalker.
Usage examples of somnambulist.
But Lady Macbeth must be a noctambulist as well as a somnambulist, for her climactic episode brings out the nocturnal shading of the tragedy.
She walked like a somnambulist toward the baby's room, and Colleen, for once happy that Dana was moving in a daze, slipped quickly into her own room.
He was not alone, on his arm hung a dainty southern beauty, perhaps an inch shorter than Bebra and three fingers' breadths taller than I, whom he introduced as Roswitha Raguna, the most celebrated somnambulist in all Italy.
As if TV was the master criminal, beaming out gameplans to the somnambulists of the street.
Roswitha, the great somnambulist, who sees through everyone, who knows everyone's innermost soul, only not her own, mamma mia, only not her own, Dio!
The Somnambulists were standing on either side of my slumped body, faces empty, eyes closed.
The doors opened, and the Somnambulists bent down, picked me up and carried me out.
When the Somnambulists finally stopped, at some unseen signal, it was only their grip on my shoulders that kept me upright.
I pulled the packet out as the Somnambulists leaned over me, tore it open, and threw the pepper into their faces.
Both Somnambulists bent forward from the waist, tears forcing themselves from their closed eyes, and in a moment they were both wide awake.
I've been watching that damned radio all night--and watching to check that no somnambulists took a stroll in this direction.
I trust that some of the somnambulists here understood this little morality play.