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trance out

verb

  1. slang.
    to go into a trancelike or ecstatic state, esp through the effects of drugs or music
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Example Sentences

“When you hear a good ballad singer, they disappear, and the story lives, and you kind of trance out listening to it,” Giddens said.

“It was a quickly processed image. You’d see it, you’d read the word and then you’re on your way. You’re driving and you didn’t have time to take in the information. You process it, but you don’t know what that means. That’s what it was about, to remove you from your trance out of ordinary life for a moment.”

“I would lock my vision straight at the computer screen, trance out, and become a human-machine hybrid zipping through the virtual architecture that my co-workers and I were building. Hunger, thirst, sleepiness, and even pain all faded away while I was staring at the screen, thinking and typing.”

From Time

These days I write more than I code, but one of the things I miss about programming is the coder’s high: those times when, for hours on end, I would lock my vision straight at the computer screen, trance out, and become a human-machine hybrid zipping through the virtual architecture that my co-workers and I were building.

From Slate

Just as often the dance-music effect was an undogmatic blend of live and machine-generated rhythms, an embrace of sounds that are difficult or impossible to produce on physical instruments, a willingness to trance out with repetition, and a sense of song structure resembling a dance-music set: prizing smooth transitions and not looking back.

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