Find the synonyms or antonyms of a word
Synonyms for slumberous
Grammar : Adj |
Spell : sluhm-ber-uh s, sluhm-bruh s or sluhm-bruh s |
Phonetic Transcription : ˈslʌm bər əs, ˈslʌm brəs or ˈslʌm brəs |
Top 10 synonyms for slumberous Other synonyms for the word slumberous
- dozy
- draggy
- drowsy
- furtiveness
- heavy
- hiding
- hush
- hypnotic
- inactive
- isolation
- lethargic
- listless
- mystery
- narcotic
- nodding
- opiate
- out
- out of it
- privacy
- quiet
- reticence
- retirement
- seclusion
- secretiveness
- secretness
- silence
- sleeping
- sleepyhead
- slow
- sluggish
- slumbersome
- slumbery
- snoozy
- solitude
- somnifacient
- somniferous
- somnific
- somnolent
- soporific
- stealth
- suppression
- surreptitiousness
- torpid
- yawning
Définition of slumberous
- adj sleepy
- adj sedative
- The slumberous pup was on its feet standing alertly defiant.
- Extract from : « The Law-Breakers » by Ridgwell Cullum
- The village was taking her back into its slumberous comfortableness.
- Extract from : « In a Little Town » by Rupert Hughes
- There is a slumberous Southern fire in the Mexican girls' eyes and love.
- Extract from : « Mexico » by Charles Reginald Enock
- It was a neighbor, stopping his slumberous horse to leave a letter.
- Extract from : « Country Neighbors » by Alice Brown
- If the War Office was too lively, this place was too slumberous by half.
- Extract from : « Alone » by Norman Douglas
- But his thoughts were gradually getting too busy for this slumberous state.
- Extract from : « Doctor Grimshawe's Secret » by Nathaniel Hawthorne
- Her spirit, lulled by a slumberous sweetness, was sentimentally inclined.
- Extract from : « Froth » by Armando Palacio Valds
- Thus, we looked upon the face of the slumberous deeps, and were alone.
- Extract from : « The House on the Borderland » by William Hope Hodgson
- Facts are the poorest and most slumberous evidences of passion or of affection.
- Extract from : « Dream Life » by Donald G. Mitchell
- Through the slumberous summer air came the whir of the machine.
- Extract from : « The Odds » by Ethel M. Dell
Based on : Thesaurus.com - Gutenberg.org - Dictionary.com - Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2019