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snooze
noun
A period of sleep; a nap.
Exact(12)
Time for an uninterrupted phone call, or a snooze on the sofa.
And those commonly acccepted age/hour requirements in full: This will probably take the form of a two-hour snooze after lunch, then a 12-hour main sleep from 7pm to 7am; babies and small toddlers match their sleep to something like the hours of the clientele of a gentleman's club.
You'll be walking five hours a day (either side of a lunchtime snooze), with the camels doing the hard work of kit-carrying (or even people-carrying if required).
After a post-prandial snooze (relaxation is what these places are all about), I explored some of the activities Alaime has dreamed up.
"It's been really painful," she says.In this section The 50-year snooze Will the real Mr Santos please speak up Intel outside Knobless oblige Clarification: Bello ReprintsThe pain will be felt across the economy.
Remember that, as you snooze on the floor of the lounge this summer.
By now the septuagenarian scribbler who was knighted in 2002 might have hung up his boots, staying on to snooze in a genteel Delhi club.
No one is likely to snooze during Mr Chéreau's "Phèdre".
In the past few weeks, equity and bond markets have sold off, emerging markets ditto, high yield bonds' spreads over Treasuries have widened a bit and equity volatility has finally stirred from its lengthy snooze.
In practice, it is a snooze chamber that takes its orders from the party, even if there are signs that it is stirring a little.
The only way to make it truly safe for players would turn it into a snooze for fans.
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