different between sundowner vs sundowning

sundowner

English

Etymology

From sundown +? -er.

Pronunciation

Noun

sundowner (plural sundowners)

  1. (Australia, obsolete) An itinerant worker, such as a swagman, who arrives at a farm too late in the day to do any work, but readily accepts food and lodging.
    • 2008, Arthur Upfield, Kees de Hoog (editor), Wisp of Wool and Disk of Silver, Up and Down Australia, page 279,
      What he saw was not usual in this part of Australia - a sundowner, a bush waif who tramps from north to south or from east to west, never working, cadging rations from the far-flung homesteads and having the ability of the camel to do without water, or find it.
    • 2010, John Hirst, Looking for Australia: Historical Essays, page 60,
      Like the Australian sundowners, some of these trampers were suspected of never wanting to find a job.
  2. (Australia, obsolete) An itinerant worker, a swagman.
  3. (nautical) A sea captain who shows harsh discipline by requiring all hands to be on board by sundown.
  4. (medicine, colloquial) A patient, usually demented, who tends to become agitated in the evening.
    • 1977, Jules Hymen Masserman, Current Psychiatric Therapies, page 179,
      These patients may improve by day only to relapse at night (nocturnal delirium or sundowner's syndrome).
    • 1989: William H. Reid, The Treatment of Psychiatric Disorders: Revised for the DSM III R., page 71,
      They generally occur in the evening or at night in the form of "sundowner" syndrome, as a result of diminished sensory input and social isolation and/or exposure to an unfamiliar environment (e.g., the hospital).
    • 2007 February 7, Dennis Fiely, Dark Ages: For the elderly fighting mental or physical problems, life takes a frightening turn when nighttime comes, The Columbus Dispatch
      Sundowner?s syndrome” refers to changes in mood and behavior that begin near dusk.
  5. (originally colonial slang, especially southern Africa) A cocktail consumed at sunset, or to signify the end of the day.
    • 1918, Robert Valentine Dolbey, Sketches of the East Africa Campaign, page 117,
      The cocktail, the universal “sherry and bitters” and sundowner will have to be retained.
    • 1952, Doris Lessing, Martha Quest, Panther 1974, p. 146:
      Mrs. Lowe-Island [] had imagined the Sports Club as a large shadowy veranda, with native servants standing like willing statues around the walls, plenty of sundowners, and that laughter which is the result of personal comment […].
    • 2005, Franz Wisner, Honeymoon With My Brother: A Memoir, page 243,
      Per custom, we capped our drives with a sundowner cocktail party at a scenic vantage point.
  6. A cocktail party held in the early evening.
    • 2005, Edward M. Bruner, Culture on Tour: Ethnographies of Travel, page 83,
      The Sundowner is basically a cocktail party with a buffet on a riverbank in the bush.
  7. A physician employed by the government who practises for private fees after his official hours.
  8. Any worker who practises for private fees after official hours.
    • 1956, Redbook: The Magazine for Young Adults (volume 108, page 64)
      These "sundowners" hold jobs in other — usually related — trades, and do their servicing nights and weekends.
    • 1961, Radio-electronics (volume 32, page 262)
      [] according to Home Furnishings Daily, “Public exposure of the sundowners provides strong support for our campaign for state licensing of TV technicians. []

Derived terms

  • sundowner syndrome

References

Anagrams

  • newsround, snow under, undersnow, undersown, unwonders

sundowner From the web:

  • what's sundowners syndrome
  • what's sundowners disease
  • sundowner meaning
  • sundowners what to do
  • what causes sundowners
  • what is sundowners syndrome in dogs
  • what does sundowners mean
  • what is sundowners in dogs


sundowning

English

Etymology

sundown +? -ing

Noun

sundowning (uncountable)

  1. (medicine, psychology, psychiatry) A state of agitation, confusion, or delirium, especially in patients suffering from Alzheimer's disease, which begins daily at nightfall and which is alleviated by daylight.
    • 1986, Norma Sullivan and Barry Fogel, "Could This Be Delirium?," The American Journal of Nursing, vol. 86, no. 12, p. 1363,
      Impaired judgment and sundowning (increased confusion when orienting cues diminish at night) often makes it necessary to restrict and protect the delirious patient.

Synonyms

  • nocturnal delirium
  • sundowner syndrome

Related terms

  • sundowner

Verb

sundowning

  1. present participle of sundown

See also

  • seasonal affective disorder

sundowning From the web:

  • what sundowning is with regard to alzheimer’s disease
  • what's sundowning syndrome
  • sundowning what to do
  • sundowning what stage
  • sundowning what stage of dementia
  • what is sundowning in dementia
  • what causes sundowning
  • what is sundowning in the elderly
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share

you may also like