Warming can be categorized as a noun, a verb and an adjective.
Adjective |
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warming - imparting heat; "a warming fire" | ||
warming - producing the sensation of heat when applied to the body; "a mustard plaster is calefacient" | ||
Verb |
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warm - make warm or warmer; "The blanket will warm you" | ||
warm - get warm or warmer; "The soup warmed slowly on the stove" | ||
Noun |
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warm - The act of warming, or the state of being warmed; a heating. |
# | Sentence | ||
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1. | adj. | A warming fire. | |
2. | adj. | A warm body. | |
3. | adj. | A warm room. | |
4. | adj. | A warm climate. | |
5. | adj. | A warm coat. | |
6. | adj. | A warm greeting. | |
7. | adj. | A warm personality. | |
8. | adj. | Warm support. | |
9. | adj. | Warm reds and yellows and orange. | |
10. | adj. | You're getting warm. | |
11. | adj. | Made things warm for the bookies. | |
12. | adj. | A warm debate. | |
13. | adj. | A warm embrace. | |
14. | adj. | A warm temper. | |
15. | adj. | A warm trail. | |
16. | noun | It turns out one of the surest barometers of the warming climate is the response of the non-human natural world to changing conditions, and biologists who study the responses have been aware for some years the biosphere is acknowledging global warming. | |
17. | noun | Half of the 300 phenophases Leopold tracked showed a response consistent with warming. | |
18. | noun | "The impacts of global warming are affecting people now in the Arctic," said ACIA chair Robert Corell. | |
19. | noun | "The impact of global warming on fish stocks and fisheries is hard to judge," the IPN report said. | |
20. | noun | "A warming of the magnitude predicted is more likely than not to be beneficial to the fisheries of the North Atlantic." | |
21. | noun | The important commercial species that probably would benefit from warming include cod, haddock, saithe, herring, blue whiting and several types of flatfish and crustaceans -- such as the Norway lobster. | |
22. | noun | Hidden in this laundry list -- and in the pile of studies examined by the Pew researchers -- is one of the fundamental chasms dividing participants in the global warming debate. | |
23. | noun | In a limited economic sense, therefore, the organization can argue warming might be a good thing. | |
24. | noun | They assumed a value -- unspecified -- for non-commercial species, and in doing so rendered the warming news a bit less rosy. | |
25. | noun | "I do not feel it has changed the US citizens which is what was needed, even now the majority want "Gas" despite the fact they are polluting the world more than any other country in the world and refuse to stop, perhaps this natural disaster, which let's face it looks like a product of Global Warming, will change their views, why not pick things up with your hands and walk with your legs, other people in the world do it, "Gas" is not the be all and end all!" | |
26. | noun | Number of species that could be extinct by 2050 if the global-warming trend continues. | |
27. | noun | Number of times Bush mentioned global warming, clean air, clean water, pollution or environment in his 2004 State of the Union speech. | |
28. | noun | Number of paragraphs devoted to global warming in the EPA's 600-page "Draft Report on the Environment" presented in 2003. | |
29. | noun | Percentage carbon dioxide emissions will increase over the next 10 years under Bush's own global-warming plan (an increase of 30 per cent above their 1990 levels). | |
30. | noun | Number of years the Bush administration said in 2003 that global warming must be further studied before substantive action could be taken. | |
31. | verb | Continue to feel the warmth of the sunlight all over your body, warming you deeply and gently. | |
32. | verb | Scientists can argue all they want about how many degrees Celsius -- or Fahrenheit -- the planet is warming and what the trend portends, but meanwhile Earth's plants, insects and animals are not waiting for the outcome. | |
33. | verb | It turns out one of the surest barometers of the warming climate is the response of the non-human natural world to changing conditions, and biologists who study the responses have been aware for some years the biosphere is acknowledging global warming. | |
34. | verb | According to Parmesan's earlier studies, one extinction event, for instance, was triggered when a checkerspot population migrated north prematurely, relying on a warming temperature signal, then was caught in a severe snowstorm in its northern habitat. | |
35. | verb | The room is warming up. | |
36. | verb | I am just warming up now. | |
37. | verb | I also brought some gruel I made. It just needs warming up. | |
38. | verb | You've started warming up. | |
39. | verb | I am only warming up now. | |
40. | verb | The heater is warming up the room. | |
41. | verb | Tom is just warming up. | |
42. | verb | Tom is warming himself by the fire. | |
43. | verb | I am warming myself by the fireplace. | |
44. | verb | After coming in from the bitter cold, Tom stood in front of the fireplace for a long time warming up his hands and feet. | |
45. | verb | I'm just warming up. |
Sentence | |
---|---|
adj. | |
A warming fire. |
|
A warm body. |
|
A warm room. |
|
A warm climate. |
|
A warm coat. |
|
A warm greeting. |
|
A warm personality. |
|
Warm support. |
|
Warm reds and yellows and orange. |
|
You're getting warm. |
|
Made things warm for the bookies. |
|
A warm debate. |
|
A warm embrace. |
|
A warm temper. |
|
A warm trail. |
|
noun | |
It turns out one of the surest barometers of the warming climate is the response of the non-human natural world to changing conditions, and biologists who study the responses have been aware for some years the biosphere is acknowledging global warming. |
|
Half of the 300 phenophases Leopold tracked showed a response consistent with warming. |
|
"The impacts of global warming are affecting people now in the Arctic," said ACIA chair Robert Corell. |
|
"The impact of global warming on fish stocks and fisheries is hard to judge," the IPN report said. |
|
"A warming of the magnitude predicted is more likely than not to be beneficial to the fisheries of the North Atlantic." |
|
The important commercial species that probably would benefit from warming include cod, haddock, saithe, herring, blue whiting and several types of flatfish and crustaceans -- such as the Norway lobster. |
|
Hidden in this laundry list -- and in the pile of studies examined by the Pew researchers -- is one of the fundamental chasms dividing participants in the global warming debate. |
|
In a limited economic sense, therefore, the organization can argue warming might be a good thing. |
|
They assumed a value -- unspecified -- for non-commercial species, and in doing so rendered the warming news a bit less rosy. |
|
"I do not feel it has changed the US citizens which is what was needed, even now the majority want "Gas" despite the fact they are polluting the world more than any other country in the world and refuse to stop, perhaps this natural disaster, which let's face it looks like a product of Global Warming, will change their views, why not pick things up with your hands and walk with your legs, other people in the world do it, "Gas" is not the be all and end all!" |
|
Number of species that could be extinct by 2050 if the global-warming trend continues. |
|
Number of times Bush mentioned global warming, clean air, clean water, pollution or environment in his 2004 State of the Union speech. |
|
Number of paragraphs devoted to global warming in the EPA's 600-page "Draft Report on the Environment" presented in 2003. |
|
Percentage carbon dioxide emissions will increase over the next 10 years under Bush's own global-warming plan (an increase of 30 per cent above their 1990 levels). |
|
Number of years the Bush administration said in 2003 that global warming must be further studied before substantive action could be taken. |
|
verb | |
Continue to feel the warmth of the sunlight all over your body, warming you deeply and gently. |
|
Scientists can argue all they want about how many degrees Celsius -- or Fahrenheit -- the planet is warming and what the trend portends, but meanwhile Earth's plants, insects and animals are not waiting for the outcome. |
|
It turns out one of the surest barometers of the warming climate is the response of the non-human natural world to changing conditions, and biologists who study the responses have been aware for some years the biosphere is acknowledging global warming. |
|
According to Parmesan's earlier studies, one extinction event, for instance, was triggered when a checkerspot population migrated north prematurely, relying on a warming temperature signal, then was caught in a severe snowstorm in its northern habitat. |
|
The room is warming up. | |
I am just warming up now. | |
I also brought some gruel I made. It just needs warming up. | |
You've started warming up. | |
I am only warming up now. | |
The heater is warming up the room. | |
Tom is just warming up. | |
Tom is warming himself by the fire. | |
I am warming myself by the fireplace. | |
After coming in from the bitter cold, Tom stood in front of the fireplace for a long time warming up his hands and feet. | |
I'm just warming up. |