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- adjectivecool (adjective) · cooler (comparative adjective) · coolest (superlative adjective)
- of or at a fairly low temperature:"it'll be a cool afternoon" · "the wind kept them cool"
- soothing or refreshing because of its low temperature:"a cool drink in the leafy shade" · "the bathroom was all glass and cool, muted blues"
- (especially of clothing) keeping one from becoming too hot:"wear your cool, comfortable shirts"
- showing no friendliness toward a person or enthusiasm for an idea or project:"he gave a cool reception to the suggestion for a research center"
- free from excitement or anxiety:"he prided himself on keeping a cool head" · "she seems cool, calm, and collected"
- (of jazz, especially modern jazz) restrained and relaxed.
- informalfashionably attractive or impressive:"he made no concessions to fashion, yet somehow he was hip and cool" · "I always wore sunglasses to look cool"
- excellent:"our office was a sunny room with a computer you didn't even have to plug in. Cool!"
- used to express acceptance or agreement:"if people want to freak out at our clubs, that's cool"
- informal(a cool —)used to emphasize a specified quantity or amount, especially of money:"a cool $15,000 to buy the franchise"
nouncool (noun) · the cool (noun)- (the cool)a fairly low temperature:"the cool of the night air"
- a time or place at which the temperature is pleasantly low:"the cool of the evening"
- calmness; composure:"he recovered his cool and then started laughing at us"
- the quality of being fashionably attractive or impressive:"all the cool of high fashion"
verbcool (verb) · cools (third person present) · cooled (past tense) · cooled (past participle) · cooling (present participle)- become or cause to become less hot:"we dived into the river to cool off" · "cool the pastry for five minutes" · "his feelings for her took a long time to cool"
- become or cause to become calm or less excited:"after I'd cooled off, I realized I was being irrational" · "George was trying to cool him down"
- (cool down)recover from strenuous physical exertion by doing gentle stretches and exercises; warm down.
OriginOld English cōl (noun), cōlian (verb), of Germanic origin; related to Dutch koel, also to cold.
Bokep
COOL | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
Other content from dictionary.cambridge.orgCool Definition & Meaning - Merriam-Webster
Learn the various meanings and uses of the word cool, from temperature to attitude to style. Find synonyms, antonyms, examples, phrases, and word history of cool.
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COOL | definition in the Cambridge English Dictionary
Cool - definition of cool by The Free Dictionary
Learn the meaning, synonyms, and idioms of the word cool, as well as its origin and evolution in slang. Find out how cool can describe temperature, emotion, style, and more.
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