Word of the Day 06/25/22 Hypnopedia
Hypnopedia (noun)
hypnopedia [ hip-nuh-pee-dee-uh ]
noun
1. sleep learning.
ORIGIN: 1930–35; hypno- + Greek paideía “child-rearing, education,” derivative of paîs, stem paid- “child” + -ía; first used and possibly coined by Aldous Huxley in his novel Brave New World (1932); see pedo-, -ia. See Hypnos
HOW TO USE HYPNOPEDIA IN A SENTENCE
Emotion and memory being moulded into something else by hypnopedia.
TURNING POINT|ALFRED COPPEL
Now YOU come up with a sentence (or fic? or graphic?) that best illustrates the word.
hypnopedia [ hip-nuh-pee-dee-uh ]
noun
1. sleep learning.
ORIGIN: 1930–35; hypno- + Greek paideía “child-rearing, education,” derivative of paîs, stem paid- “child” + -ía; first used and possibly coined by Aldous Huxley in his novel Brave New World (1932); see pedo-, -ia. See Hypnos
HOW TO USE HYPNOPEDIA IN A SENTENCE
Emotion and memory being moulded into something else by hypnopedia.
TURNING POINT|ALFRED COPPEL
Now YOU come up with a sentence (or fic? or graphic?) that best illustrates the word.
