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ALL meanings of colder

cold
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  • adjective colder having a relatively low temperature; having little or no warmth: cold water; a cold day. 1
  • adjective colder feeling an uncomfortable lack of warmth; chilled: The skaters were cold. 1
  • adjective colder having a temperature lower than the normal temperature of the human body: cold hands. 1
  • adjective colder lacking in passion, emotion, enthusiasm, ardor, etc.; dispassionate: cold reason. 1
  • adjective colder not affectionate, cordial, or friendly; unresponsive: a cold reply; a cold reception. 1
  • adjective colder lacking sensual desire: She remained cold to his advances. 1
  • adjective colder failing to excite feeling or interest: the cold precision of his prose. 1
  • adjective colder unexcitable; imperturbable: cold impassivity. 1
  • adjective colder depressing; dispiriting: the cold atmosphere of a hospital waiting room. 1
  • adjective colder unconscious because of a severe blow, shock, etc.: I knocked him cold with an uppercut. 1
  • adjective colder lacking the warmth of life; lifeless: When the doctor arrived, the body was already cold. 1
  • adjective colder faint; weak: The dogs lost the cold scent. 1
  • adjective colder (in games) distant from the object of search or the correct answer. 1
  • adjective colder Slang. (in sports and games) not scoring or winning; ineffective: Cold shooting and poor rebounding were their undoing. 1
  • adjective colder Art. having cool colors, especially muted tones tending toward grayish blue. being a cool color. 1
  • adjective colder slow to absorb heat, as a soil containing a large amount of clay and hence retentive of moisture. 1
  • adjective colder Metalworking. noting or pertaining to any process involving plastic deformation of a metal at a temperature below that at which recrystallization can occur because of the strain: cold working. 1
  • noun colder the relative absence of heat: Everyone suffered from the intense cold. 1
  • noun colder the sensation produced by loss of heat from the body, as by contact with anything having a lower temperature than that of the body: He felt the cold of the steel door against his cheek. 1
  • noun colder cold weather: He can't take the cold. 1
  • noun colder Also called common cold. a respiratory disorder characterized by sneezing, sore throat, coughing, etc., caused by an allergic reaction or by a viral, bacterial, or mixed infection. 1
  • adverb colder with complete competence, thoroughness, or certainty; absolutely: He learned his speech cold. 1
  • adverb colder without preparation or prior notice: She had to play the lead role cold. 1
  • adverb colder in an abrupt, unceremonious manner: He quit the job cold. 1
  • adverb colder Metalworking. at a temperature below that at which recrystallization can occur (sometimes used in combination): to cold-hammer an iron bar; The wire was drawn cold. 1
  • idioms colder catch / take cold, to get or suffer from a cold: We all caught cold during that dreadful winter. 1
  • idioms colder go cold, Slang. (in sports and games) to become unproductive or ineffective; be unable to score. 1
  • idioms colder in cold blood. blood (def 20). 1
  • idioms colder in from the cold, out of a position or condition of exile, concealment, isolation, or alienation: Since the new government promised amnesty, fugitive rebels are coming in from the cold. 1
  • idioms colder left out in the cold, neglected; ignored; forgotten: After the baby came, the young husband felt left out in the cold. Also, out in the cold. 1
  • idioms colder throw cold water on, to disparage; disapprove of; dampen the enthusiasm of: They threw cold water on her hopes to take acting classes. 1
  • noun colder Comparative form of cold. 1
  • adjective colder comparative form of cold: more cold. 0
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