1. dreams
Sweet dreams!
He is too busy dreaming dreams to plan what he will do in his old age.
Claude, an autotropic boy in my class whose skin is green due to chlorophyll, dreams of foresting the moon.
In one of my most loathed fever dreams, I had to unscramble a block of dry ramen with my mind.
She never in her wildest dreams would have thought her son would kill himself.
Sometimes I wonder if this world is just in someone's head, and he dreams us all into existence. Perhaps it's even me.
One of the characters in the novel dreams up a half-baked plan for robbing a bank.
The brain waves during REM sleep are the same as when awake, and it's the stage when you have dreams.
John hit the jackpot. His efforts paid off beyond his wildest dreams.
Parents look to the new generation as a generation that is far from reality and busy running after unrealistic dreams.
Dreams flew out of that box when it was opened: dreams of secrets written in disappearing ink and of overwhelming odors.
I don't know why in my dreams, she isn't there. Maybe she doesn't want to be there not to disturb me.
I have spread my dreams beneath your feet; Tread softly because you tread on my dreams.
More than iron, more than lead, more than gold I need electricity. I need it more than I need lamb or pork or lettuce or cucumber. I need it for my dreams.