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slept
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Slept

Sleep \Sleep\, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Slept; p. pr. & vb. n. Sleeping.] [OE. slepen, AS. sl?pan; akin to OFries. sl?pa, OS. sl[=a]pan, D. slapen, OHG. sl[=a]fan, G. schlafen, Goth. sl?pan, and G. schlaff slack, loose, and L. labi to glide, slide, labare to totter. Cf. Lapse.]

  1. To take rest by a suspension of the voluntary exercise of the powers of the body and mind, and an apathy of the organs of sense; to slumber.
    --Chaucer.

    Watching at the head of these that sleep.
    --Milton.

  2. Figuratively:

    1. To be careless, inattentive, or uncouncerned; not to be vigilant; to live thoughtlessly.

      We sleep over our happiness.
      --Atterbury.

    2. To be dead; to lie in the grave.

      Them also which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him.
      --1 Thess. iv. 14.

    3. To be, or appear to be, in repose; to be quiet; to be unemployed, unused, or unagitated; to rest; to lie dormant; as, a question sleeps for the present; the law sleeps.

      How sweet the moonlight sleep upon this bank!
      --Shak.

Slept

Slept \Slept\, imp. & p. p. of Sleep.

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
slept

past tense and past participle of sleep (v.).

Wiktionary
slept

vb. (en-past of: sleep)

WordNet
sleep
  1. v. be asleep [syn: kip, slumber, log Z's, catch some Z's] [ant: wake]

  2. be able to accommodate for sleeping; "This tent sleeps six people"

  3. [also: slept]

sleep
  1. n. a natural and periodic state of rest during which consciousness of the world is suspended; "he didn't get enough sleep last night"; "calm as a child in dreamless slumber" [syn: slumber]

  2. a torpid state resembling sleep

  3. a period of time spent sleeping; "he felt better after a little sleep"; "there wasn't time for a nap" [syn: nap]

  4. euphemisms for death (based on an analogy between lying in a bed and in a tomb); "she was laid to rest beside her husband"; "they had to put their family pet to sleep" [syn: rest, eternal rest, eternal sleep, quietus]

  5. [also: slept]

slept

See sleep

Usage examples of "slept".

CHAPTER VIII They must have carried me, still under the influence of wine fumes, to the chamber where I slept that night, for when I woke the following morning my surroundings were familiar enough, though a glorious maze of uncertainties rocked to and fro in my mind.

After this I slept again, soundly this time, till morning, when I awoke much refreshed, and got up.

Once we fell asleep, and, I think, must have slept for some hours, for, when we woke, our limbs were quite stiff, and the blood from our blows and scratches had caked, and was hard and dry upon our skin.

At distances all over the surface of the kraal were the remains of fires, round each of which slept some five-and-twenty Masai, for the most part gorged with food.

On the top of a rise was a little spring, which I remembered because I had slept by it a few nights before, and here I motioned to Umslopogaas to pull up, having determined to give the horses and ourselves ten minutes to breathe in.

CHAPTER V CORRIDORS OF PERIL How long I slept upon the floor of the storeroom I do not know, but it must have been many hours.

So we threw ourselves upon the hard stone floor of our prison and slept the sleep of tired men.

In all this time I had slept but twice, though once the clock around within the storehouse of the therns.

Thuvia volunteered to remain on watch while the balance of the party slept for an hour.

I could not have slept over a quarter of an hour when I was suddenly awakened by the passing of some cold and clammy thing across my forehead.

We were at last forced to the belief that he would not sleep while the other occupants of the lair slept, and so cast about in our minds for some scheme whereby we might trick him.

All those uncouth forms, and the throb of the sea outside, presently faded upon my senses, and I slept the heavy sleep of one whose wakefulness gives way before an imperious physical demand.

So the offer was gladly closed with, and curling myself in a rug of foxskins, for I was tired with much walking, sailors never being good foot-gangers, I slept soundly fill they came to tell me it was time to go on board.

Hotter and hotter it grew, while a curious secondary sunrise in the west, the like of which I never saw before seemed to add to the heat, and heavier and heavier my eyelids, till I dozed at last, and finally slept uncomfortably for a time.

I suppose I must have slept for seven or eight hours, getting the first real rest that I had had since the night before the loss of the dhow, for when I woke the sun was high in the heavens.