English edit

Etymology edit

From Middle English slombere, slomerer, slummerare, equivalent to slumber +‎ -er.

Noun edit

slumberer (plural slumberers)

  1. One who slumbers; a sleeper.
    • 1633, John Donne, “The Progress of the Soul. Metempsychosis”, in John Carey, editor, John Donne: The Major Works[1], Oxford University Press, published 1990, First Song, Stanza XV, 141-6, p. 75:
      His right arm he thrust out towards the east, / Westward his left; th' ends did themselves digest / Into ten lesser strings, these fingers were: / And as a slumberer stretching on his bed, / This way he this, and that way scattered / His other leg, which feet with toes upbear;
    • 1955, Martin Buber, translated by Maurice Friedman, The Legend of the Baal-Shem, London: Routledge, published 2002, page 148:
      There lay the houses in the dawn light with closed window-shutters, like joyless slumberers with heavy lids.

Anagrams edit