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Unconsciousness   /ˌənkˈɑnʃəsnɪs/   Listen
Unconsciousness

noun
1.
A state lacking normal awareness of the self or environment.






WordNet 3.0 © 2010 Princeton University








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"Unconsciousness" Quotes from Famous Books



... world where it is so often necessary to be a workman doing the work. By all means let a gentleman congratulate himself that he has not lost his natural love of pleasure, as against the blase, and unchildlike. But when one has the childlike joy it is best to have also the childlike unconsciousness; and I do not think we should have special affection for the little boy who ever lastingly explained that it was his duty to play Hide and Seek and one of his family virtues to be prominent in Puss in ...
— What's Wrong With The World • G.K. Chesterton

... very conventions designed to safeguard unconsciousness; made wise by the unwisdom of a civilisation which required ignorance of innocence, she had as yet lost none of her sweetness and confidence in herself and in a world which she considered a friendly one at best and, at worst, ...
— The Common Law • Robert W. Chambers

... hours—never sleeping apparently, for her eye was always bright—preening herself, turning her head slowly, so as to watch on all sides, snapping now and then at an obtrusive fly, all in utter unconsciousness that I was just behind her, watching every movement. Then, when I had enough, I would steal away along a caribou path, and push off quietly in my canoe without looking back. She saw me, of course, when I entered the canoe, but not once did she leave ...
— Wilderness Ways • William J Long

... with the tea-things, and as she set them down, remarked, with cunningly devised look of unconsciousness: ...
— Warlock o' Glenwarlock • George MacDonald

... "If I had a little bit of sugar, I believe I'd take a toddy;" and again the attendant did the honors. Our orders were received and we were about ready to go to our commands, when again, with polite intonation and a most amusing unconsciousness of any repetition, came the words, "If I had a little bit of sugar, I believe I'd take a toddy." The incident was certainly a funny one in itself, but I should not have cared to repeat it had not the official records of Sturgis's defeat by Forrest ...
— Military Reminiscences of the Civil War V2 • Jacob Dolson Cox


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