Coffee lovers can now wake up to the sound of Dunkin’ brewing

Business Wire: Dunkin’® Brews up the Ultimate Wake-Up Call for National Coffee Day With Free Coffee for Rewards Members and a First-of-its-Kind Collab With Hatch

Dunkin’® Brews up the Ultimate Wake-Up Call for National Coffee Day With Free Coffee for Rewards Members and a First-of-its-Kind Collab With Hatch

Two ways to rise and shine on September 29: free coffee for Dunkin’ Rewards® members and a limited-edition Dunkin’ x Hatch wake-up experience Wake-up with Hatch’s “Brew and Renew” alarm paired with ...

Shayla Love, New Yorker, 1 May 2026 Throngs of motorboaters flock to Boyd Lake every summer for water skiing, wake boarding and other aquatic activities on a reservoir whose primary purpose is furnishing drinking water for Greeley and serving northern Colorado agricultural needs.

Grammar Wake, wake up or awaken? Wake and wake up are verbs which mean ‘stop sleeping or end someone else’s sleep’. They are used in everyday language. …

Only wake is used in the sense "to be awake," as in expressions like waking (not wakening) and sleeping, every waking hour. Wake is also more common than waken when used together with up, and awake and awaken never occur in this context: She woke up (rarely wakened up; never awakened up or awoke up).

A wake is a gathering or social event that is held before or after someone's funeral. A funeral wake was in progress.

wake (plural wakes) A period after a person's death before or after the body is buried, cremated, etc.; in some cultures accompanied by a party or collectively sorting through the deceased's personal effects.