Latin DORMIO, I sleep; DORMITORIUM, place where people sleep.
Latin DORMIO, I sleep; DORMITORIUM, place where people sleep.
dropping off to sleep!
First attested 1625, meaning as "inducing sleep," originally used of drugs, from French hypnotique "inclined to sleep, soporific," from Late Latin hypnoticus, from Greek hypnotikos "inclined to sleep, putting to sleep, sleepy," from hypnoun "put to sleep," from hypnos "sleep"-------------The word "hypnotic" is said to derive from Hypnos, the Greek God of Sleep.
Studies have estimated that as many as one-third of Americans have suffered from sleep disorders, which may be psychological in origin and related to anxiety, stress and lifestyle.
The word "hypnosis" comes from the Greek word "hypnos," which means sleep. It was first used by Scottish surgeon James Braid in the 1840s to describe a state of focused attention and heightened suggestibility induced by a trance-like state.
Turn in "go to bed" is attested from 1695, originally nautical.
Hypno is the Greek word for sleep. The "trance" that subjects enter may or may not be a separate state of dream-like subconsciousness.
Somnus was the Roman god of sleep. Insomnia is derived from the Latin word with the same spelling together with the prefix 'in-" for negation. He is also remembered in the word Somnambulism - sleep walking. The Greek god of sleep was Hypnos, from which we get Hypnotism and related words. The word morphine also has mythological origins - Morpheus was the god of dreams, and the son of Somnus.
You have to capture Celebi and Lugia to go to Mt. Pyre.
Yes it does. Hypnotherapy comes from the greek word meaning sleep. Hypnotherapy is a great source of relaxation and calming, it is often very soothing. ************* Hypnotherapy= hypnos (=sleep in greek) + therapeea (= θεραπεία, the greek origin of the word therapy which means cure)
The origin of hit the hay means GO 2 SLEEP.(i thnk)