cold

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
7
Words With Friends
9
Letters
4
Pronunciation
/kəʊld/
See all 17 pronunciations
/kəʊld/ · [kʰɔʊɫd] · [kʰɒʊɫd] · /kɔwld/ · [kʰɔw(ɫ)d] · /kold/ · [kʰoɫd] · /kould/ · [kʰouɫd] · /kowld/ · [qʰowd] · /kaːd/ · /kaʊld/ · /koʊld/ · /kɔːld/(US) · /kaʉld/ · [kʰɒʊ(ɫ)d]

Definition of cold

30 senses · 3 parts of speech · etymology included

adj

  1. Having a low temperature.
    “A cold wind whistled through the trees.”
    “As cold waters to a thirstie soule: so is good newes from a farre countrey.”
    “Oh cold, cold, rigid, dreadful Death, set up thine altar here, and dress it with such terrors as thou hast at thy command: for this is thy dominion!”
    “I had always supposed that playboys didn't give a hoot for anything except blondes and cold bottles.”
See all 30 definitions

adj

  1. Having a low temperature.
    “A cold wind whistled through the trees.”
    “As cold waters to a thirstie soule: so is good newes from a farre countrey.”
    “Oh cold, cold, rigid, dreadful Death, set up thine altar here, and dress it with such terrors as thou hast at thy command: for this is thy dominion!”
    “I had always supposed that playboys didn't give a hoot for anything except blondes and cold bottles.”
  2. Causing the air to be cold.
    “The forecast is that it will be very cold today.”
    “As fruits of hotter countries, transearthed in colder climates, have vigour enough in themselves to be fructuous according to their nature: but, that they are hindered by the chilling nips of the air, and the soil, wherein they are planted.”
    “Antarctica is the coldest, iciest place on Earth, which makes the recent warming event particularly worrying for many scientists. […] Larter said this happens less frequently in the East Antarctic because the ocean water there is much colder.”
    “The current high temperature expected for Kansas City on Saturday is around 5 degrees, according to the National Weather Service, which would be the coldest high temperature on record in the area for the date, according to CNN Weather. […] But could it become cold enough for officials to cancel the showdown between the Chiefs and Dolphins?”
  3. Feeling the sensation of coldness, especially to the point of discomfort.
    “She was so cold she was shivering.”
  4. Unfriendly; emotionally distant or unfeeling.
    “She shot me a cold glance before turning her back.”
    “At the end of a week, she could bear the suspense no longer, and so went humbly to her old home and sought forgiveness. She was not repulsed, but her reception was cold; and this hurt her almost as badly.”
    “"Suppose someone pops in?" "Don't be silly. Mrs Cream is working on her book. Phyllis is in her room, typing Upjohn's speech. Wilbert's gone for a walk. Upjohn isn't here. The only character who could pop in would be the Brinkley Court ghost. If it does, give it a cold look and walk through it. That'll teach it not to come butting in where it isn't wanted, ha ha."”
  5. Chilled, filled with an uncomfortable sense of fear, dread, or alarm.
    “Yet oft when sundown skirts the moor ⁠An inner trouble I behold, ⁠A spectral doubt which makes me cold, That I shall be thy mate no more, […]”
  6. Dispassionate; not prejudiced or partisan; impartial.
    “Let's look at this tomorrow with a cold head.”
    “He's a nice guy, but the cold facts say we should fire him.”
    “The cold truth is that states rarely undertake military action unless their national interests are at stake.”
  7. Completely unprepared; without introduction.
    “He was assigned cold calls for the first three months.”
    “The one thing considered the brass ring in selling insurance was making a sale on a cold canvass. Cold canvassing was the most dreaded exercise for most insurance salesmen.”
  8. Unconscious or deeply asleep; deprived of the metaphorical heat associated with life or consciousness.
    “I knocked him out cold.”
    “After one more beer he passed out cold.”
    “Before Mr Big could utter another word, Dad’s false leg crashed down through the window… …and the wooden foot bashed Mr Big hard on the head. The crime boss collapsed to the floor, out cold.”
  9. (usually)Perfectly, exactly, completely; by heart; down pat.
    “Practice your music scales until you know them cold.”
    “Try both these maneuvers until you have them cold and can do them in the dark without thinking.”
    “Rehearse your lines until you have them down cold.”
    “Keep that list in front of you, or memorize it cold.”
  10. (usually)Cornered; done for.
    “With that receipt, we have them cold for fraud.”
    “Criminal interrogation. Initially they will dream up explanations faster than you could ever do so, but when they become fatigued, often they will acknowledge that you have them cold.”
    “"Either Upjohn agrees to drop that libel suit or he doesn't get these notes, as he calls them, and without them he won't be able to utter a word. He'll have to come across with the price of the papers. Won't he, Jeeves?" "He would appear to have no alternative, miss." "Unless he wants to get up on that platform and stand there opening and shutting his mouth like a goldfish. We've got him cold."”
  11. (slang)Cool, impressive.
    “There were more than a few unforgettable moments from Sunday's Game 7 showdown between the Golden State Warriors and the Sacramento Kings. Steph Curry came up with an epic performance on a record-setting evening, and he also produced one of the coldest photos of the NBA Playoffs thus far.”
    “Lowkey she so cold for that”
    “Indians see this fit and think it's the coldest thing ever”
  12. (obsolete)Not pungent or acrid.
    “cold plants”
  13. (obsolete)Unexciting; dull; uninteresting.
    “What a deal of cold business doth a man misspend the better part of life in!”
    “The jest grows cold[…]when it comes on in a second scene.”
  14. Affecting the sense of smell (as of hunting dogs) only feebly; having lost its odour.
    “a cold scent”
  15. (obsolete)Not sensitive; not acute.
    “Smell this business with a sense as cold / As is a dead man's nose.”
  16. Distant; said, in the game of hunting for some object, of a seeker remote from the thing concealed. Compare warm and hot.
    “You're cold … getting warmer … hot! You've found it!”
  17. Having a bluish effect; not warm in colour.
  18. Rarely used or accessed, and thus able to be relegated to slower storage.
  19. (informal)Without compassion; heartless; ruthless.
    “I can't believe she said that...that was cold!”
    “River Song: (upon seeing the still-living Doctor, moments after he made her and two other friends watch what they thought was his death) This is cold. Even by your standards, this is cold.”
    “"At the risk of sounding cold though, I'm glad he's gone. His abandonment left me in Aunt Fara's custody, and that's honestly the best thing he's ever done for me."”
  20. (informal)Not radioactive.
    “"That's right," Jackson said. "The Old Man will be pleased to welcome you." There was eagerness in his reedy voice. "What do you say? We'll take care of you. Feed you, bring you cold plants and animals. For a week maybe?"”
  21. Not loaded with a round of live ammunition.
  22. Without electrical power being supplied.
    “Therefore, to avoid unnecessary delay in the trouble-shooting procedure, it is good practice to make a resistance check on a "cold" circuit (before applying power), to determine whether resistance values are normal.”

noun

  1. (uncountable)A condition of low temperature.
    “Come in, out of the cold.”
  2. (countable, figuratively, uncountable)A harsh place; a place of abandonment.
    “The former politician was left out in the cold after his friends deserted him.”
  3. (countable)A common, usually harmless, usually viral illness, usually with congestion of the nasal passages and sometimes fever.
    “I caught a miserable cold and had to stay home for a week”
    “Dr. Jon S. Abramson, a pediatric infectious disease expert at Wake Forest Medical School, has found no medical evidence to support feeding a cold and starving a fever. He is particularly offended by the latter part of the phrase. […] “Always feed both colds and fevers,” Abramson said.”
  4. (slang, uncountable)Rheum; sleepy dust.
    “Who the fuck is this, pagin' me at 5:46 in the morning? / crack of dawn and now I'm yawnin' / wipe the cold out my eye, see who's this pagin' me and why”
    “But I remember this, moms would lick her finger tips / to wipe the cold out my eye before school with her spit”
  5. (abbreviation, acronym, alt-of, uncountable)Acronym of computer output to laser disc.

adv

  1. At a low temperature.
    “The steel was processed cold.”
  2. Without preparation.
    “The speaker went in cold and floundered for a topic.”
    “Two weeks after it closed, he started rehearsals for Cheer Up, a new play by Mary Roberts Rinehart booked into the Harris Theatre. It was to open cold without any out-of-town tryout under the direction of a young Cecil B. DeMille […]”
  3. (dated, informal, slang)In a cold, frank, or realistically honest manner.
    “Now Little Bo Peep cold lost her sheep / And Rip van Winkle fell the hell asleep”

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

From Middle English cold, from Anglian Old English cald. The West Saxon form, ċeald (“cold”), survived as early Middle English cheald, cheld, or chald. Both descended from Proto-West Germanic *kald,…

See full etymology

From Middle English cold, from Anglian Old English cald. The West Saxon form, ċeald (“cold”), survived as early Middle English cheald, cheld, or chald. Both descended from Proto-West Germanic *kald, from Proto-Germanic *kaldaz, a participle form of *kalaną (“to be cold”), from Proto-Indo-European *gel- (“cold”). Cognates Cognate with Scots cald, cauld (“cold”), Saterland Frisian koold (“cold”), West Frisian kâld (“cold”), Dutch koud (“cold”), Low German kold, koolt, koold (“cold”), German kalt (“cold”), Danish kold (“cold”), Norwegian Bokmål and Norwegian Nynorsk kald (“cold”), Swedish kall (“cold”).

Anagrams of cold

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Words you can make from cold

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3-letter words

6 words

2-letter words

3 words

Hooks

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