Which preposition to use with hallucination
The hallucinations of delirium tremens are the results obtained in extreme intoxication.
No matter what hallucinations in regard to ownership any man may labor under, he does not own a wife.
When the honest fisherman took breath after this exploit, and lowered his cup from the vault of heaven to the surface of the earth, he caught a view of a boat crossing the lake, coming from the Silent Pine, to that Point on which they were enjoying so many agreeable hallucinations on the subject of temperance.
Somehow, the Witch sent you here and created a very elaborate hallucination for you.
A man may carry many hallucinations with him to the grave, but a belief in the unreality of pain is hardly likely to be one of them.
The songs learned at the Jesuits reappeared, bringing with them pictures of the school and the chapel where they had resounded, driving their hallucinations to the olfactory and visual organs, veiling them with clouds of incense and the pallid light irradiating through the stained-glass windows, under the lofty arches.
Could this dainty creature, with beauty scarred and yet powerfully triumphant, be the victim of an hallucination as to the cause of that scar and the awesome circumstances which attended its infliction?
We now return to Mr. Tylor, who treats of hallucinations among other experiences which led early savage thinkers to believe in ghosts or separable souls, the origin of religion.
Mr. Britt is trying with might and main to prove that Bobby and I have hallucinations without end.
He explains the similar or identical reports of witnesses to a collective hallucination by 'the case with which such appearances adapt themselves in recollection' (p. 313), especially, of course, after lapse of time.
I understood perfectly the sort of hallucination into which I had fallen.
Tammas, after a period of meditation, more like one of Janet's hallucinations than a fit of rational thinking, asked his sister-in-law whether she thought that Janet, in the event of her getting quit of her day-dreams, would consent to live with him again.
He answered our questions, and asked us some of his own, but his attention seemed distracted by his hallucination about a beach and a ship.