Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A condition of deep stupor or unconsciousness produced by a drug or other chemical substance.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun In pathology, the stupefying effect of a narcotic; narcotism.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun (Med.) Privation of sense or consciousness, due to a narcotic.
from , Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun pathology
Unconsciousness caused by adrug ,anaesthetic or other chemical substance.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun unconsciousness induced by narcotics or anesthesia
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
Support

Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word narcosis.
Examples
-
And everything is swathed in glove leather and Alcantara, trimmed in a choice of three varieties of wood, bezeled in well-crafted aluminum brightwork and bathed in a kind of narcosis of ambient light.
-
Scopolamine was found to produce a state of excitement followed by a kind of narcosis in which, in the transition state between consciousness and sleep, hallucinations som♏eꦡtimes occur
-
I would also like to add that the term "narcosis" refers to someone who has been rendere🍎d unconscious by a general anesthetic, not someone on the mild effects of cannabis.
-
Other researchers established that the crabs were suffering from a kind of narcosis induced by hydrocarbon poisoning.
-
I would also like to add that the term "narcosis" refe๊rs to someone who has been rendered unconscious by a general anesthetic, not someone on the mild effects of cannabis.
-
Nitrox and heliox, Gideon knew, were air mixtures intended for use at great depth or during extended dives in order to alleviate the various problems, including the bends, oxygen toxicity, and nitrogen narcosis, th🌜at came as the result of gases being compressed—or decompressed—in the human body.
-
Even under the best circumstances, some nitrogen narcosis occurred at this depth.
-
Even under the best circumstances, some nitrogen narcosis occurred at this depth.
-
Nitrox and heliox, Gideon knew, were air mixtures intended for use at great depth or during extended dives in order to alleviate the various problems, including the bends, oxygen toxicity, and nitrogen narcosis, that came as the result of gases🍎 being compressed—or decompress𒁏ed—in the human body.
-
Even under the best circumstances, some nitrogen narcosis occurred at this depth.
slumry commented on the word narcosis
for example, nitrogen narcosis.
June 27, 2007
bilby commented on the word narcosis
"I'm doctor-anaesthesiologist and my duty will be that I should support viability human body during
a narcosis." - EP, my Russian pen-pal.
November 26, 2007