verb (used without object),waked or woke[wohk], /woʊk/, waked or wok·en[woh-kuhn], /ˈwoʊ kən/, wak·ing.
to become roused from sleep; awake; awaken; waken (often followed by up).
to become roused from a tranquil or inactive state; awaken; waken: to wake from one's daydreams.
to become cognizant or aware of something; awaken; waken: to wake to the true situation.
to be or continue to be awake: Whether I wake or sleep, I think of you.
to remain awake for some purpose, duty, etc.: I will wake until you return.
to hold a wake over a corpse.
to keep watch or vigil.
verb (used with object),waked or woke[wohk], /woʊk/, waked or wok·en[woh-kuhn], /ˈwoʊ kən/, wak·ing.
to rouse from sleep; awake; awaken; waken (often followed by up): Don't wake me for breakfast. Wake me up at six o'clock.
to rouse from lethargy, apathy, ignorance, etc. (often followed by up): The tragedy woke us up to the need for safety precautions.
to hold a wake for or over (a dead person).
to keep watch or vigil over.
noun
a watching, or a watch kept, especially for some solemn or ceremonial purpose.
a watch or vigil by the body of a dead person before burial, sometimes accompanied by feasting or merrymaking.
a local annual festival in England, formerly held in honor of the patron saint or on the anniversary of the dedication of a church but now usually having little or no religious significance.
the state of being awake: between sleep and wake.
Origin of wake
1
First recorded before 900; (verb) in sense “to become awake” continuing Middle English waken, unnatested Old English wacan (found only in past tense wōc and the compounds onwacan, āwacan “to become awake”; see awake; in sense “to be awake” continuing Middle English waken, Old English wacian (cognate with Old Frisian wakia, Old Saxon wakōn, Old Norse vaka, Gothic wakan ); in sense “to rouse from sleep” continuing Middle English waken, replacing Middle English wecchen, Old English weccan, probably altered by association with the other senses and with the k of Old Norse vaka; (noun) Middle English: “state of wakefulness, vigil” (late Middle English: “vigil over a dead body”), probably continuing unattested Old English wacu (found only in nihtwacu “night-watch”); all ultimately from unattested Germanic wak- “be lively”; akin to watch, vegetable, vigil
In the wake of the coronavirus pandemic, this number can certainly be expected to increase, as this spring’s primaries have indicated.
The biggest threat to mail-in voting isn’t security—it’s politics|matthewheimer|August 24, 2020|Fortune
A separate study I conducted of newspaper coverage in the wake of the 2016 election found that about a third of news stories and op-eds argued that Clinton lost because of her focus on identity politics.
How Clinton’s Loss Paved The Way For Biden|Seth Masket|August 20, 2020|FiveThirtyEight
That’s according to a working paper, published by the National Bureau of Economic Research in May, that looks at how violent crimes by veterans increased after overseas deployment began in the wake of the attacks on the Twin Towers.
The Hidden Costs of War: Vet Crimes|Nick Fouriezos|August 19, 2020|Ozy
The US’s declining stature in the wake of the pandemic is accelerating two global political trends that have emerged in the last five years.
Covid-19 and the geopolitics of American decline|Katie McLean|August 19, 2020|MIT Technology Review
Supply chains across industries are going through an unprecedented global disruption in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic which has shuttered airports, seaports and hampered the movement of goods and people around the world.
Africa is tackling its supply chain deficit with a US-backed research center in Ghana|Yinka Adegoke|July 27, 2020|Quartz
That is why The Daily Beast stands with Charlie Hebdo and published their controversial covers in the wake of the attack.
Why We Stand With Charlie Hebdo—And You Should Too|John Avlon|January 8, 2015|DAILY BEAST
In the wake of this turmoil, the New York Post reported that the police had stopped policing.
Ground Zero of the NYPD Slowdown|Batya Ungar-Sargon|January 1, 2015|DAILY BEAST
The newly free country struggled to maintain order in the wake of independence, but it was woefully unprepared.
The Congo's Forgotten Colonial Getaway|Nina Strochlic|December 18, 2014|DAILY BEAST
In the wake of the verdicts in Ferguson and New York City, many of us are still sore with emotion.
The Stacks: A Chicken Dinner That Mends Your Heart|Pete Dexter|December 7, 2014|DAILY BEAST
In the wake of Michael Brown and Eric Garner, things will not be the same.
The Day I Used Eric Garner’s Voice|Joshua DuBois|December 5, 2014|DAILY BEAST
But if I show him to you he will wake up, and who knows if he will go to sleep again.
A Comedy of Marriage and Other Tales|Guy De Maupassant
And he began pushing his way into the crowd, with Jimmie in his wake.
Jimmie Higgins|Upton Sinclair
They were walking their horses past the house, which was dark, careful not to wake Vesta.
The Duke Of Chimney Butte|G. W. Ogden
Outer angle irons of the 1st, 2nd, and 3rd longitudinals were started in the wake of the broken place.
Torpedoes and Torpedo Warfare|C. W. Sleeman
He called her, lavished tender names on her, and seeing she did not wake, ran for water and sprinkled her pale face.
An Eagle Flight|Jos Rizal
British Dictionary definitions for wake (1 of 2)
wake1
/ (weɪk) /
verbwakes, waking, wokeorwoken
(often foll by up)to rouse or become roused from sleep
(often foll by up)to rouse or become roused from inactivity
(intr; often foll by to or up to)to become conscious or awareat last he woke to the situation
(intr)to be or remain awake
(tr)to arouse (feelings etc)
dialectto hold a wake over (a corpse)
archaic, ordialectto keep watch over
wake up and smell the coffeeinformalto face up to reality, especially in an unpleasant situation
noun
a watch or vigil held over the body of a dead person during the night before burial
(in Ireland) festivities held after a funeral
the patronal or dedication festival of English parish churches
a solemn or ceremonial vigil
(usually plural)an annual holiday in any of various towns in northern England, when the local factory or factories close, usually for a week or two weeks
rarethe state of being awake
Derived forms of wake
waker, noun
Word Origin for wake
Old English wacian; related to Old Frisian wakia, Old High German wahtēn
usage for wake
Where there is an object and the sense is the literal one wake (up) and waken are the commonest forms: I wakened him; I woke him (up). Both verbs are also commonly used without an object: I woke up . Awake and awaken are preferred to other forms of wake where the sense is a figurative one: he awoke to the danger
British Dictionary definitions for wake (2 of 2)
wake2
/ (weɪk) /
noun
the waves or track left by a vessel or other object moving through water
the track or path left by anything that has passedwrecked houses in the wake of the hurricane
Word Origin for wake
C16: of Scandinavian origin; compare Old Norse vaka, vök hole cut in ice, Swedish vak, Danish vaage; perhaps related to Old Norse vökr, Middle Dutch wak wet
A funeral celebration, common in Ireland, at which the participants stay awake all night keeping watch over the body of the dead person before burial. A wake traditionally involves a good deal of feasting and drinking.