to be in a state of complete self control. Also used to describe a excellent play, normally in sports. ; dispassionate: not affectionate, cordial, or friendly; unresponsive: unconscious because of a severe blow, shock, etc. It can refer to temperature, passion, friendliness, and even your personality.
adj 1. very cold 2. deliberately controlling the expression of emotion, or lacking in feeling or friendliness Adj. (in sports and games) to become unproductive or ineffective; be unable to score.out of a position or condition of exile, concealment, isolation, or alienation: Since the new government promised amnesty, fugitive rebels are coming in from the cold.After the baby came, the young husband felt left out in the cold.to disparage; disapprove of; dampen the enthusiasm of: They threw cold water on her hopes to take acting classes.having relatively little warmth; of a rather low temperaturelacking in affection, enthusiasm, or warmth of feeling(of a colour) having violet, blue, or green predominating; giving no sensation of warmthdenoting or relating to a process in which work-hardening occurs as a result of the plastic deformation of a metal at too low a temperature for annealing to take place(of a process) not involving heat, in contrast with traditional methodsdenoting the contacting of potential customers, voters, etc, without previously approaching them in order to establish their interestwithout advance notice; without giving preparatory informationan acute viral infection of the upper respiratory passages characterized by discharge of watery mucus from the nose, sneezing, etcA viral infection characterized by inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the upper respiratory passages and usually accompanied by malaise, fever, chills, coughing, and sneezing.
After a Twitter user and hip-hop fan tweeted "Ice- T" to the Urban Dictionary page, ... since the release of his career singles "Body Rock" and "The Coldest Rap"/"Cold Wind Madness" in 1983. '. This classic has been a favorite for decades, but how many people remember the vocab?