Cold definition

Cold





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7 definitions found

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Cold \Cold\ (k[=o]ld), a. [Compar. {Colder} (-[~e]r); superl.
     {Coldest}.] [OE. cold, cald, AS. cald, ceald; akin to OS.
     kald, D. koud, G. kalt, Icel. kaldr, Dan. kold, Sw. kall,
     Goth. kalds, L. gelu frost, gelare to freeze. Orig. p. p. of
     AS. calan to be cold, Icel. kala to freeze. Cf. {Cool}, a.,
     {Chill}, n.]


     1. Deprived of heat, or having a low temperature; not warm or
        hot; gelid; frigid. "The snowy top of cold Olympis."
        --Milton.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. Lacking the sensation of warmth; suffering from the
        absence of heat; chilly; shivering; as, to be cold.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     3. Not pungent or acrid. "Cold plants." --Bacon
        [1913 Webster]
  
     4. Wanting in ardor, intensity, warmth, zeal, or passion;
        spiritless; unconcerned; reserved.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              A cold and unconcerned spectator.     --T. Burnet.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              No cold relation is a zealous citizen. --Burke.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     5. Unwelcome; disagreeable; unsatisfactory. "Cold news for
        me." "Cold comfort." --Shak.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     6. Wanting in power to excite; dull; uninteresting.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              What a deal of cold business doth a man misspend the
              better part of life in!               --B. Jonson.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              The jest grows cold . . . when in comes on in a
              second scene.                         --Addison.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     7. Affecting the sense of smell (as of hunting dogs) but
        feebly; having lost its odor; as, a cold scent.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     8. Not sensitive; not acute.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              Smell this business with a sense as cold
              As is a dead man's nose.              --Shak.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     9. Distant; -- said, in the game of hunting for some object,
        of a seeker remote from the thing concealed.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     10. (Paint.) Having a bluish effect. Cf. {Warm}, 8.
         [1913 Webster]
  
     {Cold abscess}. See under {Abscess}.
  
     {Cold blast} See under {Blast}, n., 2.
  
     {Cold blood}. See under {Blood}, n., 8.
  
     {Cold chill}, an ague fit. --Wright.
  
     {Cold chisel}, a chisel of peculiar strength and hardness,
        for cutting cold metal. --Weale.
  
     {Cold cream}. See under {Cream}.
  
     {Cold slaw}. See {Cole slaw}.
  
     {In cold blood}, without excitement or passion; deliberately.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              He was slain in cold blood after the fight was over.
                                                    --Sir W.
                                                    Scott.
  
     {To give one the cold shoulder}, to treat one with neglect.
  
     Syn: Gelid; bleak; frigid; chill; indifferent; unconcerned;
          passionless; reserved; unfeeling; stoical.
          [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Cold \Cold\, n.
     1. The relative absence of heat or warmth.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     2. The sensation produced by the escape of heat; chilliness
        or chillness.
        [1913 Webster]
  
              When she saw her lord prepared to part,
              A deadly cold ran shivering to her heart. --Dryden.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     3. (Med.) A morbid state of the animal system produced by
        exposure to cold or dampness; a catarrh.
        [1913 Webster]
  
     {Cold sore} (Med.), a vesicular eruption appearing about the
        mouth as the result of a cold, or in the course of any
        disease attended with fever.
  
     {To leave one out in the cold}, to overlook or neglect him.
        [Colloq.]
        [1913 Webster]

From The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48 [gcide]:

  Cold \Cold\, v. i.
     To become cold. [Obs.] --Chaucer.
     [1913 Webster]

From WordNet (r) 2.0 [wn]:

  cold
       adj 1: used of physical coldness; 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 climate"; "a cold room"; "dinner has gotten
              cold"; "cold fingers"; "if you are cold, turn up the
              heat"; "a cold beer" [ant: {hot}]
       2: extended meanings; especially of psychological coldness;
          without human warmth or emotion; "a cold unfriendly nod";
          "a cold and unaffectionate person"; "a cold impersonal
          manner"; "cold logic"; "the concert left me cold" [ant: {hot}]
       3: having lost freshness through passage of time; "a cold
          trail"; "dogs attempting to catch a cold scent"
       4: (color) giving no sensation of warmth; "a cold bluish gray"
       5: marked by errorless familiarity; "had her lines cold before
          rehearsals started"
       6: no longer new; uninteresting; "cold (or stale) news" [syn: {stale}]
       7: so intense as to be almost uncontrollable; "cold fury
          gripped him"
       8: sexually unresponsive; "was cold to his advances"; "a frigid
          woman" [syn: {frigid}]
       9: without compunction or human feeling; "in cold blood";
          "cold-blooded killing"; "insensate destruction" [syn: {cold-blooded},
           {inhuman}, {insensate}]
       10: feeling or showing no enthusiasm; "a cold audience"; "a cold
           response to the new play"
       11: unconscious from a blow or shock or intoxication; "the boxer
           was out cold"; "pass out cold"
       12: of a seeker; far from the object sought
       13: lacking the warmth of life; "cold in his grave"
       n 1: a mild viral infection involving the nose and respiratory
            passages (but not the lungs); "will they never find a
            cure for the common cold?" [syn: {common cold}]
       2: the absence of heat; "the coldness made our breath visible";
          "come in out of the cold"; "cold is a vasoconstrictor"
          [syn: {coldness}, {low temperature}] [ant: {hotness}]
       3: the sensation produced by low temperatures; "he shivered
          from the cold"; "the cold helped clear his head" [syn: {coldness}]

From Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0 [moby-thes]:

  421 Moby Thesaurus words for "cold":
     Asiatic flu, Hong Kong flu, Laodicean, Olympian, Siberian,
     abruptly, absolutely, acute bronchitis, adenoiditis, affectless,
     ague, aguey, aguish, algid, aloof, aluminosis, amygdalitis,
     anesthetized, anthracosilicosis, anthracosis, apathetic, arctic,
     arid, arrogant, asbestosis, asexual, asleep, asthma,
     atypical pneumonia, audacious, autistic, backward, barren, bashful,
     below zero, biting, bitter, bitterly cold, bituminosis, black,
     black lung, blah, blank, bleak, bloodless, blue with cold, blunt,
     boreal, bracing, brisk, bronchial pneumonia, bronchiectasis,
     bronchiolitis, bronchitis, bronchopneumonia, brumal, bug,
     bumptious, callous, calloused, castrated, cataleptic, catarrh,
     catatonic, chalicosis, characterless, chattering, cheerless, chill,
     chilled, chilling, chilly, chromatic, chronic bronchitis,
     cold as charity, cold as death, cold as ice, cold as marble,
     cold of heart, cold-blooded, coldblooded, coldhearted, coldness,
     collapsed lung, colorific, coloring, colorless, comatose,
     common cold, completely, coniosis, constrained, contumelious, cool,
     coryza, crisp, croup, croupous pneumonia, cutting, dead,
     dead as mutton, deadening, deceased, defunct, departed, depressing,
     detached, dichromatic, disaccordant, discouraging, discreet,
     disdainful, disheartening, dismal, dispassionate, dispiriting,
     distant, dithery, doped, double pneumonia, draggy, drear,
     drearisome, dreary, drugged, dry, dry pleurisy, dryasdust, dull,
     effete, elephantine, emasculated, emotionally dead, emotionless,
     emphysema, empty, empyema, entirely, epidemic pleurodynia,
     etiolated, eunuchized, exanimate, exclusive, expressionless,
     extinct, fade, faint, familiar, far, fervorless,
     fibrinous pneumonia, flat, flinthearted, flu, forbidding, forward,
     freezing, freezing cold, frigid, frigidity, frosted, frosty,
     frozen, frozen to death, frustrated, gelid, glacial, gloomy,
     glowing, grippe, guarded, half-conscious, half-frozen, halfhearted,
     hard, hard of heart, hardened, hardhearted, harmonious, hay fever,
     heartless, heavy, hibernal, hiemal, ho-hum, hollow, hubristic,
     hyperboreal, hyperborean, ice-cold, ice-encrusted, iced, icelike,
     iciness, icy, immediately, immovable, impassible, impassive,
     impersonal, impotent, inaccessible, inane, inanimate, inclement,
     incompatible, indifferent, inexcitable, influenza, inhibited,
     inhospitable, inimical, insensitive, insipid, insolent, insulting,
     insusceptible, introverted, jejune, joyless, keen, la grippe,
     laryngitis, late, leaden, lifeless, lipoid pneumonia,
     lobar pneumonia, low-spirited, lukewarm, lung cancer, lung fever,
     many-colored, matching, matter-of-fact, medley, modest,
     monochromatic, monochrome, monochromic, motley, narcotized, neuter,
     neutral, nipping, nippy, nirvanic, nonemotional, numbing, obdurate,
     objective, oblivious, obtrusive, obtuse, off the track, offish,
     old, oppressive, out, out cold, out of it, out of touch,
     overpresumptuous, overweening, pale, pallid, parti-colored,
     passionless, pedestrian, penetrating, perfunctory, pharyngitis,
     piercing, pigmentary, pinching, pleurisy, pleuritis, plodding,
     pneumococcal pneumonia, pneumoconiosis, pneumonia, pneumonic fever,
     pneumothorax, pointless, poky, polar, polychromatic, ponderous,
     presuming, presumptuous, prismatic, procacious, promptly, pushy,
     quinsy, rainbow, raw, remote, removed, repressed, reserved,
     restrained, reticent, retiring, rheum, rigorous, seclusive,
     self-absorbed, semiconscious, senseless, severe, sexless, shaky,
     sharp, shivering, shivery, shrinking, siderosis, silicosis, sleety,
     slow, slushy, snappy, sniffles, solemn, somber, sore throat,
     soulless, spaced out, spectral, spiritless, stale, standoff,
     standoffish, stereotyped, sterile, stiff, stodgy, stone-cold,
     stone-dead, stoned, stonyhearted, strained, strung out, stuffy,
     subdued, subzero, supercooled, superficial, suppressed, swine flu,
     tasteless, tedious, tense, tepid, the sniffles, the snuffles,
     thoroughly, tinctorial, tingent, toning, tonsilitis, trite,
     unaffable, unaffectionate, unamiable, unamicable, unapproachable,
     uncaring, uncongenial, unconscious, uncordial, undemonstrative,
     undersexed, unemotional, unenthusiastic, unexpansive, unfeeling,
     unfriendly, ungenial, unharmonious, unheated, unimpassioned,
     unimpressionable, unlively, unloving, unmerciful, unmoved,
     unmoving, unnatural, unpassionate, unprepared, unready,
     unreservedly, unresponding, unresponsive, unsexed, unsexual,
     unsociable, unsusceptible, unsympathetic, untouchable, uppish,
     uppity, vapid, variegated, virus pneumonia, warm, weak,
     wet pleurisy, whooping cough, winterbound, winterlike, wintery,
     wintry, with chattering teeth, withdrawn, wooden, zealless, zonked,
     zonked out
  
  

From Virtual Entity of Relevant Acronyms (Version 1.9, June 2002) [vera]:

  COLD
       Computer Output on LaserDisk
       
       

From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (27 SEP 03) [foldoc]:

  COLD
       
          1.  A {sugar}ed version of {COLD-K}.
       
          2.  {Computer Output to Laser Disc}.
       
          (1995-01-04)
       
       

















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