释义 |
sopor|ˈsəʊpə(r)| Also 7 sopour. [a. L. sopor deep sleep, lethargy, related to somnus sleep.] 1. A deep, lethargic, or unnatural sleep or state of sleep. In later use Path.
1675R. Burthogge Causa Dei 22 Having drunk there their Fill, Benummed with a Mortal Sopor, and consequently Irrecoverably losing and forgetting All they did. 1681H. More Exp. Dan. iii. 77 My Spirits retiring as in those that are in a deep Sopor, as if they were half dead. 1707Floyer Physic. Pulse-Watch 107 When the Pulse becomes more frequent, it turns to a..Sincope; when more rare, to a Sopor or Convulsion. 1720De Foe D. Campbell 274 Sennertus, in his Institutio Medica, writes of the Daemoniacal Sopor of Witches. 1803Med. Jrnl. X. 437 Violent gripings, lassitude, stupor and sopor, which continued a whole day. 1843R. J. Graves Syst. Clin. Med. v. 71 The patient was in such a profound sopor, that apparently nothing but warmth remained to indicate that life had not already become extinct. 1899Allbutt's Syst. Med. VII. 282 The sopor deepened until the death of the patient. †2. fig. A state of mental or moral lethargy or deadness. Obs.
1658Bp. Reynolds Van. Creat. Wks. (1677) 45, I found that that was but a sopor, a benumb'dness, which was in my apprehension a death of sin. 1681H. More Exp. Dan. App. iii. 311 Into how deep a sopor therefore or lethargy is their wit and judgment cast? 1693R. Fleming Fulfilling Script. (1801) App. i. 439 That spiritual sopor and stupidity which hath seized on others. |