Englishئاساسىي لۇغەت
wake
Universal Words
verb, noun
verb (woke )
1 [usually +adv./prep.] ~ (sb) (up) to stop sleeping; to make sb stop sleeping:
[V] What time do you usually wake up in the morning? * I always wake early in the summer. * Wake up! It's eight o'clock. * (written) They woke to a clear blue sky. * (written) She had just woken from a deep sleep. * [Vtoinf] He woke up to find himself alone in the house. * [VN] Try not to wake the baby up. * I was woken by the sound of someone moving around. -< AWAKE
2 [VN] (literary or formal) to make sb remember sth or feel sth again:
The incident woke memories of his past sufferings.
PHRASALVERBS
wake up to become more lively and interested:
Wake up and listen!
seealsoWAKE(1)
wake sb>-<up to make sb feel more lively:
A cold shower will soon wake you up. * The class needs waking up.
seealsoWAKE(1)
wake up to sth to become aware of sth; to realize sth:
He hasn't yet woken up to the seriousness of the situation. * The banks are waking up to customers' needs at last.
noun
1 an occasion before a funeral when people gather to remember the dead person, traditionally held at night to watch over the body before it is buried
2 the track that a boat or ship leaves behind on the surface of the water
IDIOMS
in the wake of sb/sth coming after or following sb/sth:
There have been demonstrations on the streets in the wake of the recent bomb attack. * A group of reporters followed in her wake. * The storm left a trail of destruction in its wake.