- 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
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