torpour

English

Noun

torpour (uncountable)

  1. Alternative spelling of torpor
    • 1961: Blake Nevius, Edith Wharton: A Study of Her Fiction, page 235 (University of California Press)
      When Frenside had left her Halo tried to collect her thoughts; but his visit had shaken her too deeply. He had roused her out of her self-imposed torpour into a state of hyper-acute sensibility, and detaching her from the plight in which she was entangled had compelled her to view it objectively.
    • 1988: Peter Yapp, The Travellers’ Dictionary of Quotation: Who Said What, About Where?, page 428 (Taylor & Francis; →ISBN, 9780415027601)
      The climate and country were such as to gratify every appetite for pleasureable sensation, without enervating or relaxing the frame, or allowing the mind to sink into an Asiatic torpour.
    • 1995: Robert Lalonde and Leonard Sugden, The Ogre of Grand Remous, page 97 (Ekstasis Editions; →ISBN, 9780921215929)
      How could I describe, relate that sweetish discharge, half vanilla, half hen’s blood, the essence of fern sap and foul sweat, like my own sweat when I would touch myself and shiver, mouth and nostrils gaping wide, during certain nights of torpour, deep satisfaction and incomprehension, deep down in my bed?
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