cool

Adjective
  1. Neither warm nor very cold;
    Giving relief from heat (synset 302540350)
    "a cool autumn day"; "a cool room"; "cool summer dresses"; "cool drinks"; "a cool breeze"
  2. Marked by calm self-control (especially in trying circumstances);
    Unemotional (synset 300532977)
    "play it cool"; "keep cool"; "stayed coolheaded in the crisis"; "the most nerveless winner in the history of the tournament"
  3. Inducing the impression of coolness;
    Used especially of greens and blues and violets when referring to color (synset 302542621)
    "cool greens and blues and violets"; "the cool sound of rushing water"
  4. Psychologically cool and unenthusiastic;
    Unfriendly or unresponsive or showing dislike (synset 302541827)
    "relations were cool and polite"; "a cool reception"; "cool to the idea of higher taxes"
  5. Being satisfactory or in satisfactory condition (synset 302088253)
    "an all-right movie"; "the passengers were shaken up but are all right"; "is everything all right?"; "everything's fine"; "things are okay"; "dinner and the movies had been fine"; "another minute I'd have been fine"
  6. Used of a quantity or amount (especially of money) for emphasis (synset 301920631)
    "a cool million bucks"
  7. Fashionable and attractive at the time;
    Often skilled or socially adept (synset 300974839)
    "he's a cool dude"; "that's cool"; "Mary's dress is really cool"; "it's not cool to arrive at a party too early"
Noun
  1. The quality of being at a refreshingly low temperature (synset 105023185)
    "the cool of early morning"
  2. Great coolness and composure under strain (synset 104911339)
    "keep your cool"
Verb
  1. Make cool or cooler (synset 200371065)
    "Chill the food"
  2. Loose heat (synset 200370517)
    "The air cooled considerably after the thunderstorm"
  3. Lose intensity (synset 200370779)
    "His enthusiasm cooled considerably"

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