that means that you came to your senses and came to repentance after you realize that all you did was wrong.
This is not an idiom. You can figure out the meaning by defining the words.
Roused: awakened or stirred to action
Eternal: everlasting
Wakefulness: a state of alertness and vigilance
That is not an idiom. It means exactly what it says, that someone was roused to eternal wakefulness. You might need a dictionary instead.
Roused to eternal wakefulness means someone is alert and paying attention. They may have been overlooking something or not concentrating in the past and are now very aware of the situation.
Fierce when roused
With acknowledgement to the Oxford Thesaurus: Synonyms for "aware": conscious of, mindful of, informed about, acquainted with, familiar with, alive to, alert to; cognizant of knowledgeable, enlightened, well-informed, au fait
It stems from Old French, with the negative prefix non-plus chalant, the present participle of the verb chaloir, which means warmth, or "to be concerned". Chaloir in turn comes from the Latin word calere, which in its literal sense means "to be hot or warm", and developed into the figurative sense "to be roused or fired with hope, zeal, or anger". So you can see that the etymology of the word makes sense, since a nonchalant person is unlikely to concern themselves with or become heated about anything.
This is not an idiom. It means just what it sounds like it means -- somebody was roused into eternal wakefulness. You just need a dictionary, I suppose.
That is not an idiom. It means exactly what it says, that someone was roused to eternal wakefulness. You might need a dictionary instead.
Roused to eternal wakefulness means someone is alert and paying attention. They may have been overlooking something or not concentrating in the past and are now very aware of the situation.
"Roused to eternal wakefulness" could mean being awakened or brought to complete awareness that lasts forever, implying a state of perpetual consciousness or existence. This phrase may suggest a sense of being fully alert and alive indefinitely, with no possibility of returning to a state of unawareness or sleep.
Can I use 'roused'? Well anyway, here are two for roused: I roused out of bed. He was roused to action by corageous words - not my sentence.
Awakenings.
The word roused is a past tense of the word rouse. The word means to awaken and bring out of a state of sleep. An sample sentence would be, ÒHe was roused from sleep by the loud gun shotsÓ.
"Roused" is not a mathematical term. 923 ROUNDED to the nearest hundred is 900.
"Roused" is not a mathematical term. 248 ROUNDED to the nearest hundred is 200.
Fierce when roused
My cousin makes me want to rouse things up when i she tells me her eight grade prank.
Roused is a verb: Bring out of sleep; awaken: "she was roused from a deep sleep by a hand on her shoulder".