Unconscious in a sentence as a noun

First guy dropped unconscious with the first blow, second guy stumbled dazed. The last two took off so fast they left the car behind.

They realized and they rushed out: the baby was unconscious. The right thing was done, they put ice-water on the baby.

And she left the scene unconscious in an ambulance. Now I don't know what the statistics are, but my bet is if you don't have car insurance, you're note likely to have medical either.

I suppose that some of them may be unconscious, but just knowing that Gosling said most were dead or uninjured kind of makes me think otherwise.

If you're a normal person with a family and their own field of expertise who doesn't have time to take an EMT course and learn how to intubate an unconscious blunt force trauma victim, well then **** you. You're all sheeple anyway.

You might if you were carted into a Home Depot unconscious on a gurney, handed a non-returnable light bulb and stuck with a bill for $6,844.

Gee whillikers, if only anyone ever had studied the unconscious changes in reaction to a proposal submitted under a male name or a female name! etc etc.

Face to face works so well because there are so many unconscious cues we can pick up on. There's a whole other channel of nonverbal, subconscious communication.

Though the idea of fixing payments was right there in plain sight, they never saw it, because their unconscious mind shrank from the complications involved. Other than gut instinct is there any reason to believe this is the case?

One of the two person crew noticed Kenny laying unconscious in the minefield and went to check if he was alive. Finding a pulse, they brought him to the doughnut wagon, which was cleared out and converted to an emergency operating room.

Unconscious in a sentence as an adjective

The letter had an interesting voice and was well written; however, it immediately set off unconscious alarms in my mind. It was trying to influence the reader too coarsely on too emotional a level; I do not like that sort of thing very much.

The troll identifies a pressure point in the collective unconscious of an online community, and then subtly attacks it. Depending on how skilled the troll is, what follows is a lot of attention and a large degree of over-reaction.

There are many studies showing that nearly everyone has unconscious biases including minorities. This is normal.

Nobody can ever account for all unconscious bias. It's the original sin doctrine of the social justice warrior community.

A nervous tic, an unconscious look of anxiety, a habit of muttering to yourself--anything that carried with it the suggestion of abnormality, of having something to hide. In any case, to wear an improper expression on your face...

She was screaming at him and us, saying he is ODed, and get an ambulance, so I called emergency, asked for ambos, didn't give my name, and described that a guy was unconscious and needed medical help. 20secs later we heard the sirens, and we saw the cops screaming down the road in the distance, no ambulance in sight.

If I do that and then get 16 hours of exercise, healthy eating, and sleep then the next day I'll have made more progress in my unconscious and hit a positive feedback loop where elegant solutions to difficult problems present themselves effortlessly. Contrast to my youth where I'd regularly "work" 12-16 hour days.

It seems like writing a naive Bayesean classifier for "Was this written by a Turker" should be like taking candy from a baby who hates candy, has very slippery fingers, and is unconscious.

The entitled and largely unconscious male privilege in most of these HN comments is pretty hard to stomach against the large and steadily-accumulating picture of just how very different this industry presents itself to men and to women. Just because you don't directly experience or see it doesn't mean it doesn't exist.

There's ample evidence to show that members of underrepresented groups within individual companies/industries experience unconscious biases in hiring/ranking/etc, even towards groups of which they're a member.

Unconscious definitions

noun

that part of the mind wherein psychic activity takes place of which the person is unaware

adjective

not conscious; lacking awareness and the capacity for sensory perception as if asleep or dead; "lay unconscious on the floor"

adjective

without conscious volition

adjective

(followed by `of') not knowing or perceiving; "happily unconscious of the new calamity at home"- Charles Dickens