hallucinate in English

verb
1
experience a seemingly real perception of something not actually present, typically as a result of a mental disorder or of taking drugs.
people sense themselves going mad and hallucinate about spiders
synonyms:have hallucinationssee thingsbe deliriousfantasizetripsee pink elephants
verb
    have hallucinationssee thingsbe deliriousfantasizetripsee pink elephants

Use "hallucinate" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hallucinate" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hallucinate", or refer to the context using the word "hallucinate" in the English Dictionary.

1. Drug addicts often hallucinate.

2. Hunger made him hallucinate.

3. - Dua Lipa - Hallucinate (Akey Remix) - Akey - Chang.

4. You again? Why couldn't I hallucinate someone who's not a moron?

5. After two days without food and water, Voss began to hallucinate.

6. While in his medicated, pain-saturated state, he begins to hallucinate.

7. Mental disorders, drug use and hypnosis can all cause people to hallucinate.

8. 2 While in his medicated, pain-saturated state, he begins to hallucinate.

9. People starved of sleep start to lose their concentration and may hallucinate.

10. In higher doses it can happen. Thought processes become distorted and you hallucinate.

11. A drunkard may see “strange things” in that he may hallucinate or fantasize.

12. Many college students in the 1960's took & quot ; acid & quot ; in order to hallucinate.

13. If you stared long enough and hard, you could even begin to hallucinate the appearance of small islands.

14. Neuroscientists Baland Jalal and V.S. Ramachandran have recently proposed neurological theories for why people hallucinate shadow figures during sleep paralysis.

15. Sometimes, she said, before the people come on, she may hallucinate pink and blue squares on the floor, which seem to go up to the ceiling.

16. Rosalie had developed a condition known as Charles Bonnet Syndrome, in which patients with either impaired vision or total blindness suddenly hallucinate whole scenes in vivid color.

17. [2] Contrary to a view that occasionally imputes this kind of naïve freedom propaganda to poststructuralist authors such as Deleuze and Guattari, disparaging them as anarchist aging hippies, with a little good will one can read from Deleuze and Guattari that they unequivocally identify the pole of movement and organization/institution and set it in a relation: in "Thousand Plateaus" Deleuze and Guattari not only hallucinate - as has often been imputed - hybrid streams of deterritorialization, but also describe a permanent connection between deterritorialization and reterritorialization.