Interpretation of The Awakening
1, wake up after coma.
From: Song and Zhou Dynasties _ Qingbo Magazine Volume 5: Anyone who wants to be cold and dies can't be with hot things immediately, and if he is less, he will wake up gradually, fearing that cold and heat will be excited.
All people who are dying of cold can't use hot things to keep them warm at once. After a while, they will gradually wake up because they are worried that cold and heat will stimulate each other.
2. Extend to awakening; Wake up.
From: Lu Xun's "Twenty-four filial piety pictures of morning flowers": Their eyes still shine with the brilliance of awakening and joy.
3. wake it up; Wake up.
From: Ming Langying's "Seven Versions of Dialectical Seven Tu Su Wines": The interpreter came up with a medicine to cure the epidemic, which is particularly ridiculous, so he said, "Kill a ghost and wake up people's souls."
Sun Simiao invented the medicine for the plague. The antidote said that the human soul was revived because all the ghosts were killed. This is ridiculous.
Extended data
An idiom describing a person who has just woken up.
1, sleepy [Shuìy?NX and ngs not ng]: sleepy, just waking up; Describe a person who has just woken up and is still not fully awake.
Source: Lu Xun's "New Story: Picking Wei": There are not many pedestrians on the street; All I met was a sleepy woman, drawing water by the well.
Sentence: There was a knock at the door in the early morning, and I got up sleepily to open the door.
2. Sleepy eyes [shu ? Shuìy nménglóng]: Sleepy eyes, sleepy when I just woke up; Vague, vague; When I want to sleep or just wake up, my eyes have a hazy expression.
Source: Cao Qingxue Qin's Dream of Red Mansions: The 95th time: Baoyu was sleepy and didn't look at it in his hand, so he went underground and said: You are fooling me again.
Those people couldn't help talking, so they found a driver, stuffed these sleepy people into the car and drove to the mountains.
3. Sleepy [shuìyìménglóng]: describes blurred eyes. Of not waking up.
Source: Ding Ling's Shanghai in Spring 1930. Occasionally, one or two apprentices in a small shop looked down at the door panels half asleep.