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hypnotic
[hip-not-ik]
hypnotic
/ hɪpˈnɒtɪk /
adjective
of, relating to, or producing hypnosis or sleep
(of a person) susceptible to hypnotism
noun
a drug or agent that induces sleep
a person susceptible to hypnosis
Other Word Forms
- hypnotically adverb
- antihypnotic adjective
- antihypnotically adverb
- nonhypnotic adjective
- nonhypnotically adverb
- prehypnotic adjective
- unhypnotic adjective
- unhypnotically adverb
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of hypnotic1
Example Sentences
At the helm was Osbourne, who channeled the darker forces within this music with hypnotic wild-child abandon, as if he were possessed by the hellfire spirit.
Bianchi alleged his confession and guilty pleas were coerced by “hypnotic manipulation” and that the facts of his confession did not match the physical evidence.
In their farewell album as Tennis, husband-and-wife folk rockers Alaina Moore and Patrick Riley succinctly pack 14 years of introspection and hypnotic melodies into one stunning record.
Set in the idyllic island of Naxos, Greece, Pochoda refashions Euripides’ “The Bacchae” to weave a hypnotic tale of recently widowed Lena, breaking free from the strictures imposed by the men in her life.
Fans can expect "hypnotic, trance-like pop songs, pulsating and lush" on the album with lyrics that make you feel "young, fun and free" according to Rolling Stone writer Brittany Spanos.
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