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" 1
