Trance \Trance\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Tranced}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Trancing}.] 1. To entrance.
And three I left him tranced. --Shak.
2. To pass over or across; to traverse. [Poetic]
Trance the world over. --Beau. & Fl.
When thickest dark did trance the sky. --Tennyson.
Trance \Trance\, n. [F. transe fright, in OF. also, trance or swoon, fr. transir to chill, benumb, to be chilled, to shiver, OF. also, to die, L. transire to pass over, go over, pass away, cease; trans across, over + ire to go; cf. L. transitus a passing over. See {Issue}, and cf. {Transit}.] 1. A tedious journey. [Prov. Eng.] --Halliwell.
2. A state in which the soul seems to have passed out of the body into another state of being, or to be rapt into visions; an ecstasy.
And he became very hungry, and would have eaten; but while they made ready, he fell into a trance. --Acts. x. 10.
My soul was ravished quite as in a trance. --Spenser.
3. (Med.) A condition, often simulating death, in which there is a total suspension of the power of voluntary movement, with abolition of all evidences of mental activity and the reduction to a minimum of all the vital functions so that the patient lies still and apparently unconscious of surrounding objects, while the pulsation of the heart and the breathing, although still present, are almost or altogether imperceptible.
He fell down in a trance. --Chaucer.
Trance \Trance\, v. i. To pass; to travel. [Obs.]
The fourth time, they were put into a trance and told to imagine that a local anesthetic was spreading from the fingers of their left hand up through the forearm.
"He goes off into a kind of a trance," said Brendan Bracken.
Sacred ash and lime juice was applied to their wounds, but even after the trance lifted. there was no apparent pain.
Clothes were torn away unconsciously and two or three hot bodies collided with me, whirling away like dervishes. Soon the houngan came out of his trance, sweating and jiggering his shoulder-blades like an epileptic.
Upon seeing the bodies, Miranda said she thought the ceremony participants were asleep or in a trance, Gonzalez said.
Another time, after a procedure to induce a trance, they were told again to push a button when they felt the longer pulses.