different between nightmare vs midnightmare

nightmare

English

Alternative forms

  • night-mare (obsolete)

Etymology

From Middle English night-mare, from Old English *nihtmare, equivalent to night +? mare (evil spirit believed to afflict a sleeping person). Cognate with Scots nichtmare and nichtmeer, Dutch nachtmerrie, Middle Low German nachtm?r, German Nachtmahr.

Pronunciation

  • (Received Pronunciation) IPA(key): /?na?t.m??/
  • (General American) IPA(key): /na?t.m???/, [n???.m???]

Noun

nightmare (plural nightmares)

  1. (now rare) A demon or monster, thought to plague people while they slept and cause a feeling of suffocation and terror during sleep. [from 14th c.]
    • 1817, Walter Scott, Rob Roy:
      It haunted me, however, more than once, like the nightmare.
    • 1843, Edgar Allan Poe, ‘The Black Cat’:
      I started, hourly, from dreams of unutterable fear, to find the hot breath of the thing upon my face, and its vast weight—an incarnate Night-Mare that I had no power to shake off—incumbent eternally upon my heart!
  2. (now chiefly historical) A feeling of extreme anxiety or suffocation experienced during sleep; Sleep paralysis. [from 16th c.]
    • 1792, James Boswell, in Danziger & Brady (eds.), Boswell: The Great Biographer (Journals 1789–1795), Yale 1989, p. 209:
      Had been afflicted in the night with that strange complaint called the nightmare.
  3. A very bad or frightening dream. [from 19th c.]
    I had a nightmare that I tried to run but could neither move nor breathe.
    • July 18 2012, Scott Tobias, AV Club The Dark Knight Rises[1]
      With his crude potato-sack mask and fear-inducing toxins, The Scarecrow, a “psychopharmacologist” at an insane asylum, acts as a conjurer of nightmares, capable of turning his patients’ most terrifying anxieties against them.
  4. (figuratively) Any bad, miserable, difficult or terrifying situation or experience that arouses anxiety, terror, agony or great displeasure. [from 20th c.]
    Cleaning up after identity theft can be a nightmare of phone calls and letters.

Synonyms

  • (demon said to torment sleepers): incubus, succubus, night hag

Related terms

  • nightmarish
  • daymare

Translations

nightmare From the web:

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  • what nightmares do dogs have
  • what nightmares do babies have
  • what nightmare on elm street is the best
  • what nightmare is on the moon this week
  • what nightmares disturb anakin
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midnightmare

English

Etymology

From mid- +? nightmare

Adverb

midnightmare (not comparable)

  1. (temporal location) During a nightmare.
    • 1991, Carol Muske-Dukes, Dear Digby, page 61,
      "Minnie — " I tried again, but what issued from my throat was that sound we all make, midnightmare, somewhere between a growl and a silent scream.
    • 2007, Janice Kay Johnson, Christmas Presents and Past, page 230,
      Will tried to convince himself that he had the life he deserved. That it was restful not having to put up a front all the time. Knowing he wasn't disturbing Dinah's sleep when he woke midnightmare, shouting.

Alternative forms

  • mid-nightmare

midnightmare From the web:

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