Dream, v. i. [imp. & p. p. Dreamed or Dreamt (drĕmt); p. pr. & vb. n. Dreaming.]
  1. To have ideas or images in the mind while in the state of sleep; to experience sleeping visions; -- often with of; as, to dream of a battle, or of an absent friend.
  2. To let the mind run on in idle revery or vagary; to anticipate vaguely as a coming and happy reality; to have a visionary notion or idea; to imagine.
  Here may we sit and dream
  Over the heavenly theme.   --Keble.
     They dream on in a constant course of reading, but not digesting.   --Locke.
  dream
       n 1: a series of mental images and emotions occurring during
            sleep; "I had a dream about you last night" [syn: dreaming]
       2: a cherished desire; "his ambition is to own his own
          business" [syn: ambition, aspiration]
       3: imaginative thoughts indulged in while awake; "he lives in a
          dream that has nothing to do with reality" [syn: dreaming]
       4: a fantastic but vain hope (from fantasies induced by the
          opium pipe); "I have this pipe dream about being emperor
          of the universe" [syn: pipe dream]
       5: a state of mind characterized by abstraction and release
          from reality; "he went about his work as if in a dream"
       6: someone of something wonderful; "this dessert is a dream"
       v 1: have a daydream; indulge in a fantasy [syn: daydream, woolgather,
             stargaze]
       2: experience while sleeping; "She claims to never dream"; "He
          dreamt a strange scene"
       [also: dreamt]