/hÉĖtÉ/ - [hater] - hotā¢ter
We found 3 definitions of hotter from 2 different sources.
Adjectivehot, hotter, hottest |
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hot - used of physical heat; having a high or higher than desirable temperature or giving off heat or feeling or causing a sensation of heat or burning; "hot stove"; "hot water"; "a hot August day"; "a hot stuffy room"; "she's hot and tired"; "a hot forehead" | ||
cold lacking the warmth of life; "cold in his grave" | ||
warm of a seeker; near to the object sought; "you're getting warm"; "hot on the trail" | ||
temperature the degree of hotness or coldness of a body or environment (corresponding to its molecular activity) | ||
baking, baking hot as hot as if in an oven | ||
blistery, blistering very fast; capable of quick response and great speed; "a hot sports car"; "a blistering pace"; "got off to a hot start"; "in hot pursuit"; "a red-hot line drive" | ||
calefacient, warming producing the sensation of heat when applied to the body; "a mustard plaster is calefacient" | ||
calefactive, calefactory serving to heat; "a heating pad is calefactory" | ||
calorifacient producing heat; usually used of foods; "calorifacient chili peppers" | ||
calorific heat-generating; "the calorific properties of fuels" | ||
fervent, fervid extremely hot; "the fervent heat...merely communicated a genial warmth to their half-torpid systems"- Nathaniel Hawthorne; "set out...when the fervid heat subsides"- Frances Trollope | ||
fiery, igneous like or suggestive of fire; "a fiery desert wind"; "an igneous desert atmosphere" | ||
heatable capable of becoming hot; "the heatable tip of a soldering iron" | ||
heated up, het, heated, het up made warm or hot (`het' is a dialectal variant of `heated'); "a heated swimming pool"; "wiped his heated-up face with a large bandana"; "he was all het up and sweaty" | ||
hottish somewhat hot | ||
overheated heated beyond a safe or desirable point; "the child became overheated"; "overheated metal" | ||
red-hot glowing red with heat | ||
scorching hot and dry enough to burn or parch a surface; "scorching heat" | ||
sizzling hot enough to burn with or as if with a hissing sound; "a sizzling steak"; "a sizzling spell of weather" | ||
stifling, sultry, sulfurous, sulphurous characterized by oppressive heat and humidity; "the summer was sultry and oppressive"; "the stifling atmosphere"; "the sulfurous atmosphere preceding a thunderstorm" | ||
sweltering, sweltry excessively hot and humid or marked by sweating and faintness; "a sweltering room"; "sweltering athletes" | ||
thermal caused by or designed to retain heat; "a thermal burn"; "thermal underwear" | ||
torrid extremely hot; "the torrid noonday sun"; "sultry sands of the dessert" | ||
tropic, tropical of weather or climate; hot and humid as in the tropics; "tropical weather" | ||
hot - extended meanings; especially of psychological heat; marked by intensity or vehemence especially of passion or enthusiasm; "a hot temper"; "a hot topic"; "a hot new book"; "a hot love affair"; "a hot argument" | ||
cold lacking the warmth of life; "cold in his grave" | ||
passionate having or expressing strong emotions | ||
emotionalism, emotionality emotional nature or quality | ||
flaming, fiery like or suggestive of fire; "a fiery desert wind"; "an igneous desert atmosphere" | ||
heated made warm or hot (`het' is a dialectal variant of `heated'); "a heated swimming pool"; "wiped his heated-up face with a large bandana"; "he was all het up and sweaty" | ||
sizzling, red-hot hot enough to burn with or as if with a hissing sound; "a sizzling steak"; "a sizzling spell of weather" | ||
sensual, sultry sexually exciting or gratifying; "sensual excesses"; "a sultry look"; "a sultry dance" | ||
torrid extremely hot; "the torrid noonday sun"; "sultry sands of the dessert" | ||
hot - marked by excited activity; "a hot week on the stock market" | ||
active characterized by energetic activity; "an active toddler"; "active as a gazelle"; "an active man is a man of action" | ||
hot - very popular or successful; "one of the hot young talents"; "cabbage patch dolls were hot last season" | ||
popular (of music or art) new and of general appeal (especially among young people) | ||
hot - producing a burning sensation on the taste nerves; "hot salsa"; "jalapeno peppers are very hot" | ||
spicy | ||
tasty pleasing to the sense of taste; "a tasty morsel" | ||
hot - performed or performing with unusually great skill and daring and energy; "a hot drummer"; "he's hot tonight" | ||
skilled having or showing or requiring special skill; "only the most skilled gymnasts make an Olympic team"; "a skilled surgeon has many years of training and experience"; "a skilled reconstruction of her damaged elbow"; "a skilled trade" | ||
hot - sexually excited or exciting; "was hot for her"; "hot pants" | ||
sexy marked by or tending to arouse sexual desire or interest; "feeling sexy"; "sexy clothes"; "sexy poses"; "a sexy book"; "sexy jokes" | ||
hot - recently stolen or smuggled; "hot merchandise"; "a hot car" | ||
illegal prohibited by law or by official or accepted rules; "an illegal chess move" | ||
hot - charged or energized with electricity; "a hot wire"; "a live wire" | ||
live | ||
charged of a particle or body or system; having a net amount of positive or negative electric charge; "charged particles"; "a charged battery" | ||
hot - wanted by the police; "a hot suspect" | ||
hot - characterized by violent and forceful activity or movement; very intense; "the fighting became hot and heavy"; "a hot engagement"; "a raging battle"; "the river became a raging torrent" | ||
raging | ||
hot - having or bringing unusually good luck; "hot at craps"; "the dice are hot tonight" | ||
hot - very unpleasant or even dangerous; "make it hot for him"; "in the hot seat"; "in hot water" | ||
hot - newest or most recent; "news hot off the press"; "red-hot information" | ||
red-hot | ||
hot - very good; often used in the negative; "he's hot at math but not so hot at history" | ||
hot - newly made; "a hot scent" | ||
hot - having or showing great eagerness or enthusiasm; "hot for travel" | ||
hot - of a seeker; very near to the object sought; "you are hot" | ||
hot - having or dealing with dangerously high levels of radioactivity; "hot fuel rods"; "a hot laboratory" | ||
hot - (color) bold and intense; "hot pink" | ||
hot - very fast; capable of quick response and great speed; "a hot sports car"; "a blistering pace"; "got off to a hot start"; "in hot pursuit"; "a red-hot line drive" | ||
blistering, red-hot |