|
RESTING |
Dormant |
|
INACTIVE |
Dormant |
|
INERT |
Dormant |
|
ASLEEP |
Dormant |
|
|
LATENT |
Dormant |
|
HIBERNATING |
Lying dormant |
|
SLEEPS |
Becomes dormant |
|
CESSANT |
Inactive; dormant |
|
|
HIBERNATE |
Lie dormant during winter |
|
HIBERNATES |
Stays dormant for winter |
|
SLEEPER |
That which lies dormant, as a law. |
|
DORMANCY |
The state of being dormant; quiescence; abeyance. |
|
DORMANT |
In a sleeping posture; as, a lion dormant; --
distinguished from couchant. |
|
QUIESCENT |
Not ruffed with passion; unagitated; not in action; not
excited; quiet; dormant; resting. |
|
DIURNATION |
The condition of sleeping or becoming dormant by day,
as is the case of the bats. |
|
LATIBULIZE |
To retire into a den, or hole, and lie dormant in
winter; to retreat and lie hid. |
|
WAKE |
To be exited or roused up; to be stirred up from a
dormant, torpid, or inactive state; to be active. |
|
ACTIVE |
In action; actually proceeding; working; in force; --
opposed to quiescent, dormant, or extinct; as, active laws; active
hostilities; an active volcano. |
|
COUCHANT |
Lying down with the head raised, which distinguishes
the posture of couchant from that of dormant, or sleeping; -- said of a
lion or other beast. |
|
SLEEP |
To be, or appear to be, in repose; to be quiet; to be
unemployed, unused, or unagitated; to rest; to lie dormant; as, a
question sleeps for the present; the law sleeps. |
|
AROUSE |
To excite to action from a state of rest; to stir, or
put in motion or exertion; to rouse; to excite; as, to arouse one from
sleep; to arouse the dormant faculties. |
|
AWAKE |
To rouse from a state resembling sleep, as from death,
stupidity., or inaction; to put into action; to give new life to; to
stir up; as, to awake the dead; to awake the dormant faculties. |
|
GEMMULE |
... the offspring,
but are often transmitted in a dormant state during many generations
and are then developed. See Pangenesis. ... |