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  2. to start to understand or feel something or to make someone start to understand or feel something: The chance meeting awoke the old passion between them. Young people need to awake to the risks involved in casual sex. Synonyms.

  3. awake in American English. (əˈweik) (verbawoke or awaked, awoke or awaked or awoken, awaking) transitive verb or intransitive verb. 1. to wake up; rouse from sleep. I awoke at six with a feeling of dread. 2. to rouse to action; become active. His flagging interest awoke.

  4. to start to understand or feel something or to make someone start to understand or feel something: The chance meeting awoke the old passion between them. Young people need to awake to the risks involved in casual sex. Synonyms. arouse. awaken (something) in someone. ignite.

  5. 1. : to arouse from sleep or a sleeplike state. He was awoken by the storm. 2. : to make active : to stir up. an experience that awoke old memories. awake.

  6. From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English a‧wake1 /əˈweɪk/ S2 adjective [not before noun] 1 not sleeping I hope hes awake now. She was still only half awake when I brought her a cup of coffee. How do you stay awake during boring lectures? Emma lay awake half the night, worrying. The noise brought him wide awake (=completely awake).

  7. All you need to know about "AWAKE" in one place: definitions, pronunciations, synonyms, grammar insights, collocations, examples, and translations.

  8. not conscious; lacking awareness and the capacity for sensory perception as if asleep or dead. adjective. mentally perceptive and responsive;"an alert mind". “ awake to the dangers of her situation”. “was now awake to the reality of his predicament”. synonyms: alert, alive. aware, cognisant, cognizant.

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