he usually snoozes at times of the day,i saw crash snoozing in the day in a clip of crash nitro kart
by helping us stay awake
It can keep you awake for a very long time but when it wears off, you'll crash. Not a great feeling.
CRASH
No, the word 'awake' is a verb (awake, awakes, awaking, awoke or awoken) and an adjective (awake, more awake, most awake). The adjective 'awake' is most often functions as a predicate adjective following a linking verb.Examples:I often awake on a day off at the time the alarm rings on a workday. (verb)They were awake and ready when I arrived. (adjective)
I was awake at midnight The baby was awake playing in her crib. I feel more awake when I drink coffee.
No. Awake is an adjective. A related adverb is wakefully.
awake
The word awake is more often used as an adjective, as in, are you awake? than as a verb anyway, as in, awake! But if used as a verb, the future tense becomes will awaken.
awake
Awake
Awake In America was created in 2004.
It's not a movie. It was an NBC television series called "Awake" (2012). Stars Jason Isaacs, Laaura Allen, Steve Harris, Dylan Minnette, Wilmer Valderrama.