One should not wake a sleeping child as this will cause substantial night time sleep disturbances which will have negative effects on the sleep of the parents as well as the rest of the household.
Yes there really is a word such as woken up for example, "She has woken up!"
This is a fallacy that you can't wake up a sleepwalker . You can. My husband is one and I wake up each time.
they wake up
they like to be woken up by the sound of the oven's alarm.
"aufgewacht" is an adjective, it's English equivalents are "woken", "woken up" and "awake".
Yes why not? It does not ask if he/she will wake up if you shout at them.
The past participle tense of "wake" is "woken." For example, "I have woken up early every day this week."
The senstance should read "Has he woken up yet?" The verb takes the past tense. It can also be "Has he awakened?"
Although this is a persistent and often-repeated warning, it isn't dangerous, unless your sleepwalker is balancing on the edge of a roof at the time. Just as when the person involved would be in his bed, just wake him gently. He/she is in a state comparable with someone deep in thought about something else while physically going through the motions. If woken roughly, he/she will jump and start; if woken gently, he/she will just shake of the cowwebs from his mind and grin sheepishly.
The past participle of "wake" is "woken" or "waked" depending on the context. For example, "He had woken up early" or "He was waked by the sound of the alarm."
Technically, yes, although it's more common to say, "The kids had been woken up."
Odysseus is woken up on Phaeacia by the sound of Nausicaa and her handmaidens playing games near the river.