A phenomenon called sleep inertia causes this. When you're sleeping a long time, the brain wants to remain asleep. A cup of coffee should do the trick.
The past tense of oversleep is overslept.
No
It is Overslept
No, "over" is a prefix, while "sleep" is a base word. When combined, "oversleep" forms a new word with its own distinct meaning.
Overslept is the past participle and past tense of oversleep.
So he can have the next 30 mins to himself
The present tense of "overslept" is "oversleep." It is the base form of the verb used to describe the action of sleeping longer than intended in the present time. For example, you might say, "I often oversleep on weekends."
People who oversleep (miss the alarm) often sacrifice their breakfast in the hopes of making up for lost time. and people who obviously aren't hungry and don't have time for breakfast...
outcrop overlap oxlip outjump overstep oversleep
No, not really. the closest you could get with this sentence would be" No, I snoozed that part of the lecture." meaning you considered it so unimportant you chose not to pay attention.
· obey · object · observe · occupy · officiate · open · operate · orchestrate · ordain · order · organize · overdraw · overestimate · overpower · oversleep · own
Traffic jam Oversleep Not feeling well Dealing with kids