Citations:sleeptalker

Noun: "a person who talks unconsciously in their sleep"

 * 1957 — Arthur Mizener, "Introduction", in F. Scott Fitzgerald, Afternoon of an Author: A Selection of Uncollected Stories and Essays, Scribner (1956), page 5:
 * Indeed, they are made to blur together as do events in the carefully calculated confusion of the fictional sleeptalker like Lady Macbeth and Molly Bloom
 * 2007 — Lota A Teh, "Consciousness and Its Altered States", in General Psychology for Filipino College Students (eds. Lota A. Teh & Elizabeth J. Macapagal), Ateneo de Manila University Press (2007), ISBN 9789715505260, page 113:
 * The speech of the sleeptalker makes little sense.
 * 2008 — Christian Jarrett & Joannah Ginsburg, This Book Has Issues: Adventures in Popular Psychology, Continuum (2008), ISBN 9780826479785, page 141:
 * Often they will wake when their sleeptalking startles another person, who then makes a noise at being woken up, waking the sleeptalker to ask the other "What's wrong?"
 * 2011 — Lilith Saintcrow, Unfallen, Orbit (2011), ISBN 9780316209809, unnumbered page:
 * She muttered something in response, a slurred jumble like a sleeptalker.