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cool
adjective
-
cool
,
cooler
,
coolest
slightly
cold
in
a
pleasant
way
,
neither
warm
nor
very
cold
•
The
evening
breeze
felt
pleasantly
cool
after
the
hot
day
.
The
evening
breeze
felt
pleasantly
cool
after
the
hot
day
.
•
She
dipped
her
feet
into
the
cool
water
of
the
mountain
stream
.
She
dipped
her
feet
into
the
cool
water
of
the
mountain
stream
.
Old
English
“
cōl
”,
from
Proto-Germanic
*kōlaz
,
related
to
Dutch
"
koel
"
and
German
"
kühl
",
meaning
cold
.
adjective
-
cool
,
cooler
,
coolest
showing
style
or
approval
;
very
good
,
fashionable
,
or
impressive
•
Those
new
sneakers
look
cool
with
your
outfit
.
Those
new
sneakers
look
cool
with
your
outfit
.
•
Her
cool
attitude
helped
her
stay
relaxed
during
the
interview
.
Her
cool
attitude
helped
her
stay
relaxed
during
the
interview
.
verb
to
make
something
less
hot
,
or
to
become
less
hot
•
Let
the
soup
cool
before
you
taste
it
.
Let
the
soup
cool
before
you
taste
it
.
•
The
engine
takes
a
while
to
cool
after
a
long
drive
.
The
engine
takes
a
while
to
cool
after
a
long
drive
.
interjection
used
to
express
agreement
,
approval
,
or
that
something
is
good
•
"
We
got
front-row
tickets
!" "
Cool
!"
"
We
got
front-row
tickets
!" "
Cool
!"
•
"
Dinner
’
s
ready
." "
Cool
,
I
’
m
starving
."
"
Dinner
’
s
ready
." "
Cool
,
I
’
m
starving
."
noun
-
cool
calmness
and
self-control
in
a
stressful
or
exciting
situation
•
He
kept
his
cool
during
the
emergency
and
called
for
help
.
He
kept
his
cool
during
the
emergency
and
called
for
help
.
•
Don
’
t
lose
your
cool
when
things
go
wrong
.
Don
’
t
lose
your
cool
when
things
go
wrong
.