Cold /(kōld)/

Cold

a.
  1. Deprived of heat, or having a low temperature; not warm or hot; gelid; frigid.
  2. Lacking the sensation of warmth; suffering from the absence of heat; chilly; shivering; as, to be cold.
  3. Not pungent or acrid.
  4. Wanting in ardor, intensity, warmth, zeal, or passion; spiritless; unconcerned; reserved.
    A cold and unconcerned spectator.
    — T. Burnet.
    No cold relation is a zealous citizen.
  5. Unwelcome; disagreeable; unsatisfactory.
  6. Wanting in power to excite; dull; uninteresting.
    What a deal of cold business doth a man misspend the better part of life in!
    The jest grows cold . . . when in comes on in a second scene.
  7. Affecting the sense of smell (as of hunting dogs) but feebly; having lost its odor; as, a cold scent.
  8. Not sensitive; not acute.
    Smell this business with a sense as cold As is a dead man's nose.
  9. Distant; -- said, in the game of hunting for some object, of a seeker remote from the thing concealed.
  10. Having a bluish effect. Cf. Warm, 8. (Paint.)
    He was slain in cold blood after the fight was over.

Cold

n.
  1. The relative absence of heat or warmth.
  2. The sensation produced by the escape of heat; chilliness or chillness.
    When she saw her lord prepared to part, A deadly cold ran shivering to her heart.
  3. A morbid state of the animal system produced by exposure to cold or dampness; a catarrh. (Med.)

Phrases & Compounds

Cold sore
a vesicular eruption appearing about the mouth as the result of a cold, or in the course of any disease attended with fever.<-- causative virus Herpes simplex -->
To leave one out in the cold
to overlook or neglect him.

Cold

v. i.
  1. To become cold. [Obs.]