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Sleep SayingsGood night, Sleep tightTo sleep tight is to sleep well. 'Tight' seems an odd word to use in this context. It may refer to pulling bed clothes tightly around you as you snuggle down to go to sleep but there is another explanation. www.takeourword.com disagrees saying ... It seems that the word tight was used to mean "soundly" or "steadfastly", as in the expression sit tight. The phrase goodnight, sleep tight probably caught on purely because of its internal rhyme.
KipThe original meaning is probably the Danish word kippe for a hut or an alehouse. It was first recorded in the mid 18th century as an Irish slang term for a brothel. By the latter part of the 19th century the word meant a common lodging-house for tramps and the homeless. Soon after, it changed from the place where you sleep, to the act of sleeping itself (though in Scotland the word can mean a bed). In the 20th century it shifted still further away from slang towards the modern informal or colloquial usage — to mean either a nap or a longer sleep; the idea or act of sleeping.
In the pinkIn the pink signifies a state of well being; good health. The pink here has nothing to do with colour, rather with the same source as pinking scissors. They are both based on the old English pynca meaning "point", hence "peak" or "apex". Shakespeare in Romeo and Juliet (II, iv) speaks of "the pink of courtesy".
Sleep like a topTo sleep like a top is to sleep very soundly. This seems an odd way of describing a good sleep. However, the top referred to is indeed the child's toy. When it is spinning, it appears to be still. It is this apparent stillness that gave rise to the simile, first used in 1613.
Never stand when you can sit, never sit when you can lie down, never stay awake when you can sleep.
To know much sleep less.
How the Biblical Land of Nod came to be associated with sleeping.www.takeourword.com says ... This usage began in the mid-18th century. Related Products
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