Haruko
What's the difference between "doze off in class" and "fall asleep in class? "
5 août 2014 11:42
Réponses · 6
3
Not really that much. They both mean basically the same thing. Doze implies a lighter sleep than just saying someone was asleep. Also doze usually means a gradual falling asleep whereas someone can fall quickly asleep or not.
5 août 2014
1
Well, when you doze off, it means you didn't plan to sleep - it just happens. Therefore, you doze off in places where you wouldn't normally sleep. In your example, you've given an unusual place to fall asleep, so both examples can mean the same thing.
5 août 2014
Thank you so much, Kristen <3
5 août 2014
As far as the action goes, they pretty much mean the same thing. Personally, whenever I hear someone say that they "Dozed off," I feel like they sort of "descended" into a sleep. Have you ever been in class or at work and felt yourself blinking slowly and fighting to keep your eyes open because you were so tired, until you finally fell into a very light sleeping state? That's how I imagine the phrase "Doze off" Whenever I hear someone say they "fell asleep in class," I often imagine someone who is tired and puts their head on the desk and falls asleep willingly. That's not always the case, of course, but that's what I associate it with. You can use the two interchangeably and they are VERY similar. What I wrote above is how I associate the terms as a native English speaker, and I obviously cannot speak for any other English speaker.
5 août 2014
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