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Cold   /koʊld/   Listen
Cold

adjective
(compar. colder; superl. coldest)
1.
Having a low or inadequate temperature or feeling a sensation of coldness or having been made cold by e.g. ice or refrigeration.  "A cold room" , "Dinner has gotten cold" , "Cold fingers" , "If you are cold, turn up the heat" , "A cold beer"
2.
Extended meanings; especially of psychological coldness; without human warmth or emotion.  "A cold and unaffectionate person" , "A cold impersonal manner" , "Cold logic" , "The concert left me cold"
3.
Having lost freshness through passage of time.  "Dogs attempting to catch a cold scent"
4.
(color) giving no sensation of warmth.
5.
Marked by errorless familiarity.
6.
Lacking originality or spontaneity; no longer new.  Synonyms: dusty, moth-eaten, stale.  "Stale news"
7.
So intense as to be almost uncontrollable.
8.
Sexually unresponsive.  Synonym: frigid.  "A frigid woman"
9.
Without compunction or human feeling.  Synonyms: cold-blooded, inhuman, insensate.  "Cold-blooded killing" , "Insensate destruction"
10.
Feeling or showing no enthusiasm.  "A cold response to the new play"
11.
Unconscious from a blow or shock or intoxication.  "Pass out cold"
12.
Of a seeker; far from the object sought.
13.
Lacking the warmth of life.
noun
1.
A mild viral infection involving the nose and respiratory passages (but not the lungs).  Synonym: common cold.
2.
The absence of heat.  Synonyms: coldness, frigidity, frigidness, low temperature.  "Come in out of the cold" , "Cold is a vasoconstrictor"
3.
The sensation produced by low temperatures.  Synonym: coldness.  "The cold helped clear his head"



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"Cold" Quotes from Famous Books



... then filled with water. When the stones were sufficiently heated, the patient would draw himself into the oven; a blanket would be thrown over the open end, and hot stones put into the water until the patient could stand it no longer. He was then withdrawn from his steam bath and doused into the cold stream near by. This treatment may have answered with the early ailments of the Indians. With the measles or small-pox it ...
— Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant, Complete • Ulysses S. Grant

... fortune turned the barbarians toward Catulus who had to meet their whole attack with his soldiers, among whom was Sylla. The heat of the day and the burning rays of the sun, which was in the eyes of the Cimbrians, helped the Romans. The barbarians, reared in cold wooded places, hardened to extreme cold, could not stand the heat. Sweating, panting, they shaded their faces from the sun with their shields. The battle occurred after the summer solstice, three days before the new ...
— Battle Studies • Colonel Charles-Jean-Jacques-Joseph Ardant du Picq

... dances a mountain brook, cold from the Jura; in the great courtway is a fountain and fish-pond, and all around are flowering plants and stately palms. All is quiet and orderly. No children play, no merry voices call, no glad laughter echoes through these courts. Even the ...
— Little Journeys to the Homes of the Great, Vol. 2 of 14 - Little Journeys To the Homes of Famous Women • Elbert Hubbard

... sat down on the grass, and though it was warm summer weather, I shivered from head to foot, and I remember thinking to myself, 'This queer boy sitting here isn't Dudley Wylde—this boy couldn't get angry, he's as cold as an icicle—and Dudley Wylde's heart used to beat, beat, oh! so lively and quick, but this boy's heart is under a great weight, and will never stir again—this boy will never run again, nor laugh, ...
— The Old Castle and Other Stories • Anonymous

... themselves are not very well lit. Our friend went forward in the warm gloom, his eyes fixed upon a distant luminous region extending nearly across the whole width of the Villa, as if the air had glowed there with its own cold, bluish, and dazzling light. This magic spot, behind the black trunks of trees and masses of inky foliage, breathed out sweet sounds mingled with bursts of brassy roar, sudden clashes of metal, and grave, ...
— A Set of Six • Joseph Conrad


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