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"sound sleeper" is a correct phrase in written English
You can use it to describe someone who sleeps soundly and deeply, e.g. "He's a sound sleeper; he sleeps through most noises."
Exact(10)
I am usually a sound sleeper, but tonight, all night, it seems, I am listening.
Monsignor Kelly ran downstairs into the room of the sound sleeper.
Dr. Abidari says the alarms can cure the problem but can be hard on families, especially if the child is a sound sleeper.
If the transition is done slowly and smoothly enough, and if the baby is a sound sleeper, then it will remain asleep during the whole transition).
It amplifies the regular alarm sounds so they are loud enough to wake me up, and I'm a pretty sound sleeper.
Clearly Mason Disick, 4, is a sound sleeper, since his little sister Penelope, 2, had her foot in his face!
Similar(48)
But until recently, sleep researchers thought that elementary school students were generally sound sleepers.
Night bruxism becomes a serious problem when it causes pain, damages teeth or disrupts sleep, but many bruxists are sound sleepers, not even aware of the grinding.
A survey of 70,000 women aged over 16, published in 2005, showed that women who slept five or fewer hours a night were a third more likely to put on at least 33lb than sound sleepers.
Sound sleepers share a surprising secret: a bustling brain.
For decades, researchers instead chalked up the vast variability between light and heavy sleepers to differences in sleep stage; sound sleepers were thought to spend more of their repose in the deeper stages of sleep.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com