Wakeful in a sentence as an adjective

Now I've got used to the exercise - that's my theory - I've shifted back to being more wakeful at night.

"Morning people" don't need to exert a lot of mental effort to be wakeful in the morning.

This is a study on mice, which from my minimal research appear to be more wakeful at night.

Definitely doesn't seem brighter to me, the blue-white brightness is far more wakeful.

I got a sedative, but was wakeful enough to watch the procedure on a screen above me.

I'm not sure, but depending on how micro your dose was, it might have had a similar wakeful effect.

I’m a night owl and prefer day mode due to the wakeful effects you described, but I keep Night Shift on 24/7 to reduce blues.

It activates alpha waves in your brain, which are present when you’re in a state of wakeful relaxation.

I am confused as to the distinction between your "wakeful mind's eye" and your "more abstract mental visualization".

Weighing that against the risks of a traumatic or very painful wakeful experience is not trivial.

You spend around half of your wakeful hours at your job, if it's unfulfilling you're trading misery in addition to time for money.

The downy social media A partner in your sorrow's mysteries; For shade to shade will come too drowsily, And drown the wakeful anguish of the soul.

How can you really know you have control as opposed to having dreamt you have control; this question finds an analogue in the question of freewill in [wakeful] life.

The patient developed such a severe impairment of arousal that he required intensive auditory and tactile stimulation to maintain a wakeful state.

The BBC published an interesting article recently about how it was possibly customary until fairly recently to sleep in two sessions at night, with an hour or two of wakefulness in between them.

Whereas formerly Apprentices and clerks with others used to take a morning draught of Ale, Beer or Wine, which, by the dizziness they cause in the Brain, made many unfit for business, they use now to play the Good-fellows in this wakeful and civil drink"And another from the historian Michelet:...For at length the tavern has been dethroned, the detestable tavern where, half a century ago, our young folks rioted among wine-tubs and harlots.

Wakeful definitions

adjective

carefully observant or attentive; on the lookout for possible danger; "a policy of open-eyed awareness"; "the vigilant eye of the town watch"; "there was a watchful dignity in the room"; "a watchful parent with a toddler in tow"

See also: argus-eyed open-eyed vigilant

adjective

(of sleep) easily disturbed; "in a light doze"; "a light sleeper"; "a restless wakeful night"

See also: light

adjective

marked by full consciousness or alertness; "worked every moment of my waking hours"

See also: waking