yawn - meaning and definition. What is yawn
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What (who) is yawn - definition

REFLEX
Yaun; Pandiculation; Oscitation; Yawnage; Yawns; Pendiculation; Pandiculate; Yawning; Yauning; Chasmology; 🥱
  • A white tiger yawning
  • ''Two women ironing'', one with a yawn, by [[Edgar Degas]]
  • doi-access=free }}</ref>
  • A soldier hides his yawn from his lady companion in this detail from a painting by [[Oscar Bluhm]] titled ''Ermüdende Konversation'', or "Wearisome conversation".
  • Research data strongly suggest that neither contagious nor story-induced yawning is reliable in children below the age of six years.<ref name=Anderson/>

yawn         
(yawns, yawning, yawned)
1.
If you yawn, you open your mouth very wide and breathe in more air than usual, often when you are tired or when you are not interested in something.
She yawned, and stretched lazily...
VERB: V
Yawn is also a noun.
Rosanna stifled a huge yawn.
N-COUNT
2.
If you describe something such as a book or a film as a yawn, you think it is very boring. (INFORMAL)
The debate was a mockery. A big yawn...
The concert was a predictable yawn.
= bore
N-SING: a N
3.
A gap or opening that yawns is large and wide, and often frightening. (LITERARY)
The gulf between them yawned wider than ever...
VERB: V
yawn         
I
n.
1) to stifle, suppress a yawn
2) a loud yawn
II
v. to yawn loudly
yawn         
¦ verb
1. involuntarily open one's mouth wide and inhale deeply due to tiredness or boredom.
2. [usu. as adjective yawning] be wide open: a yawning chasm.
¦ noun
1. an act of yawning.
2. informal a boring or tedious thing or event.
Derivatives
yawningly adverb
Origin
OE geonian, of Gmc origin.

Wikipedia

Yawn


A yawn is a reflex lasting 4–7 seconds, and is characterized by a long inspiratory phase with gradual mouth gaping, followed by a brief climax (or acme) with muscle stretching, and a rapid expiratory phase with muscle relaxation. For fish and birds, this is described as gradual mouth gaping, staying open for at least 3 seconds and subsequently a rapid closure of the mouth. Almost all vertebrate animals, including mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and even fish, experience yawning. The study of yawning is called chasmology.

Yawning (oscitation) most often occurs in adults immediately before and after sleep, during tedious activities and as a result of its contagious quality. It is commonly associated with tiredness, stress, sleepiness, boredom, or even hunger. In humans, yawning is often triggered by the perception that others are yawning (for example, seeing a person yawning, or talking to someone on the phone who is yawning). This is a typical example of positive feedback. This "contagious" yawning has also been observed in chimpanzees, dogs, cats, birds, and reptiles and can occur between members of different species. Approximately twenty psychological reasons for yawning have been proposed by scholars but there is little agreement on the primacy of any one.

During a yawn, muscles around the airway are fully stretched, including chewing and swallowing muscles. Due to these strong repositioning muscle movements, the airway (lungs and throat) dilates to three or four times its original size. The tensor tympani muscle in the middle ear contracts, which creates a rumbling noise perceived as coming from within the head; however, the noise is due to mechanical disturbance of the hearing apparatus and is not generated by the motion of air. Yawning is sometimes accompanied, in humans and other animals, by an instinctive act of stretching several parts of the body including the arms, neck, shoulders and back.

Examples of use of yawn
1. Yawn, yawn – yet another "challenging" installation that the art elite have foisted on us.
2. Revealed: the secret of why we yawn Scientists claim to have discovered the secret of why we yawn.
3. I agree the analogy would be incorrect for cricket matches, where "beer–tent to beer–tent" or "yawn to yawn" might suit.
4. A vacuum continues to yawn where this ideology should be.
5. Al Zawahiri‘s message deserved more than a mere yawn.