0 someone who wakes up easily/does not wake up easily -- ≈ mieć lekki/mocny sen
1 a train or a part of a train that has beds in it -- pociąg hotelowy lub sypialny, wagon sypialny
2 a piece of wood that is used to support a railway track (= the thing a train moves along on) -- podkład (kolejowy)
3 a small gold or silver ring worn in the ear -- (kolczyk) kółko
One older, male rough sleeper remarked: seen violence and trouble in hostels, but not so much on the streets, you can pick your friends on the street.
Now this is a rough sleeper who doesn't have a watch, whose head's absolutely pickled with alcohol, so he does not remember times for appointments.
To agree to such appeal, however, it was the judge who would have had to have been a sleeper.
Like a dais, they displayed their incumbents when sleeping, their emptiness at other times awaiting the absent sleeper.
Studies comparing the personality profiles of good and poor sleepers have found consistent differences in young,64 middle-aged65 and elderly66 subjects.
The first issue to consider is the appropriateness - from a social justice perspective - of attempting to coerce rough sleepers into hostels.
It is assumed that the deeper the sleep, the more restorative it is and the harder it is to awaken the sleeper.
This includes the police, who sometimes have not been able to use their powers because of a lack of options to move rough sleepers onto.