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hot    音标拼音: [h'ɑt]
a. 热的,热心的,辣的,热情的,激动的,猛烈的,紧迫的
ad. 热,紧迫地

热的,热心的,辣的,热情的,激动的,猛烈的,紧迫的热,紧迫地

hot


hot
adj 1: 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" [ant: {cold}]
2: 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" [synonym: {hot}, {raging}]
3: 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" [ant: {cold}]
4: (color) bold and intense; "hot pink"
5: sexually excited or exciting; "was hot for her"; "hot pants"
6: recently stolen or smuggled; "hot merchandise"; "a hot car"
7: 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" [synonym: {blistering},
{hot}, {red-hot}]
8: wanted by the police; "a hot suspect"
9: producing a burning sensation on the taste nerves; "hot
salsa"; "jalapeno peppers are very hot" [synonym: {hot}, {spicy}]
10: performed or performing with unusually great skill and
daring and energy; "a hot drummer"; "he's hot tonight"
11: very popular or successful; "one of the hot young talents";
"cabbage patch dolls were hot last season"
12: very unpleasant or even dangerous; "make it hot for him";
"in the hot seat"; "in hot water"
13: newest or most recent; "news hot off the press"; "red-hot
information" [synonym: {hot}, {red-hot}]
14: having or bringing unusually good luck; "hot at craps"; "the
dice are hot tonight"
15: very good; often used in the negative; "he's hot at math but
not so hot at history"
16: newly made; "a hot scent"
17: having or showing great eagerness or enthusiasm; "hot for
travel"
18: of a seeker; very near to the object sought; "you are hot"
19: having or dealing with dangerously high levels of
radioactivity; "hot fuel rods"; "a hot laboratory"
20: charged or energized with electricity; "a hot wire"; "a live
wire" [synonym: {hot}, {live}]
21: marked by excited activity; "a hot week on the stock market"

Hot \Hot\,
imp. & p. p. of {Hote}. [Obs.] --Spenser.
[1913 Webster]


Hot \Hot\, a. [Compar. {Hotter}; superl. {Hottest}.] [OE. hot,
hat, AS. h[=a]t; akin to OS. h[=e]t, D. heet, OHG. heiz, G.
heiss, Icel. heitr, Sw. het, Dan. heed, hed; cf. Goth.
heit[=o] fever, hais torch. Cf. {Heat}.]
1. Having much sensible heat; exciting the feeling of warmth
in a great degree; very warm; -- opposed to cold, and
exceeding warm in degree; as, a hot stove; hot water or
air. "A hotvenison pasty." --Shak.
[1913 Webster]

2. Characterized by heat, ardor, or animation; easily
excited; firely; vehement; passionate; violent; eager.
[1913 Webster]

Achilles is impatient, hot, and revengeful.
--Dryden.
[1913 Webster]

There was mouthing in hot haste. --Byron.
[1913 Webster]

3. Lustful; lewd; lecherous. --Shak.
[1913 Webster]

4. Acrid; biting; pungent; as, hot as mustard.
[1913 Webster]

{Hot bed} (Iron Manuf.), an iron platform in a rolling mill,
on which hot bars, rails, etc., are laid to cool.

{Hot wall} (Gardening), a wall provided with flues for the
conducting of heat, to hasten the growth of fruit trees or
the ripening of fruit.

{Hot well} (Condensing Engines), a receptacle for the hot
water drawn from the condenser by the air pump. This water
is returned to the boiler, being drawn from the hot well
by the feed pump.

{In hot water} (Fig.), in trouble; in difficulties. [Colloq.]

Syn: Burning; fiery; fervid; glowing; eager; animated; brisk;
vehement; precipitate; violent; furious; ardent;
fervent; impetuous; irascible; passionate; hasty;
excitable.
[1913 Webster]


Hote \Hote\, v. t. & i. [pres. & imp. {Hatte}, {Hot}, etc.; p.
p. {Hote}, {Hoten}, {Hot}, etc. See {Hight}, {Hete}.]
1. To command; to enjoin. [Obs.] --Piers Plowman.
[1913 Webster]

2. To promise. [Obs.] --Chaucer.
[1913 Webster]

3. To be called; to be named. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]

There as I was wont to hote Arcite,
Now hight I Philostrate, not worth a mite.
--Chaucer.
[1913 Webster]


Hight \Hight\, v. t. & i. [imp. {Hight}, {Hot}, p. p. {Hight},
{Hote} (?), {Hoten} (?). See {Hote}.] [OE. heiten, highten,
haten, hoten; also hight, hatte, hette, is called, was
called, AS. h[=a]tan to call, name, be called, to command,
promise; also h[=a]tte is called, was called; akin to G.
heissen to call, be called, bid, Goth. haitan to call, in the
passive, to be called.]
1. To be called or named. [Archaic & Poetic.]
[1913 Webster]

Note: In the form hight, it is used in a passive sense as a
present, meaning is called or named, also as a
preterite, was called or named. This form has also been
used as a past participle. See {Hote}.
[1913 Webster]

The great poet of Italy,
That highte Dante. --Chaucer.
[1913 Webster]

Bright was her hue, and Geraldine she hight.
--Surrey.
[1913 Webster]

Entered then into the church the Reverend
Teacher.
Father he hight, and he was, in the parish.
--Longfellow.
[1913 Webster]

Childe Harold was he hight. --Byron.
[1913 Webster]

2. To command; to direct; to impel. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]

But the sad steel seized not where it was hight
Upon the child, but somewhat short did fall.
--Spenser.
[1913 Webster]

3. To commit; to intrust. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]

Yet charge of them was to a porter hight. --Spenser.
[1913 Webster]

4. To promise. [Obs.]
[1913 Webster]

He had hold his day, as he had hight. --Chaucer.
[1913 Webster]

378 Moby Thesaurus words for "hot":
OK, Titian, Titian-red, abandoned, ablaze, ace-high, activated,
afire, animal, ape about, aphrodisiomaniacal, approaching,
approximate, approximating, ardent, arm-in-arm, autoluminescent,
bad, baking, bang-up, banned, bawdy, blistering, boiling,
boiling over, bonzer, boss, breathless, bricky, brisk, broiling,
bugs on, bully, burning, burning hot, burning with excitement,
but good, canicular, cardinal, carmine, carnal, carnation,
carnelian, cerise, charged, cheek-by-jowl, cherry, cherry-colored,
cherry-red, clitoromaniacal, close, combustible, committed,
concupiscent, contaminated, cool, cordial, corking, cracked on,
crackerjack, crazy about, crimson, curried, damask, dandy,
dedicated, delicious, delirious, detectable, determinable, devoted,
devout, dirty, disappearing, discernible, disclosable,
discoverable, drunk, ducky, earnest, ebullient, ejaculatory,
electric-heated, electrified, enthusiastic, erotic,
eroticomaniacal, erotomaniacal, estral, estrous, estrual, excited,
explosive, exposable, exuberant, fab, faithful, fanatic, febrile,
ferruginous, fervent, fervid, fevered, feverish, feverous, fiery,
findable, fine and dandy, fire-red, flame-colored, flame-red,
flaming, fleshly, flushed, freaked-out, fugitive, gaga over,
gas-heated, gear, glorious, glowing, goatish, gone on, great,
grilling, groovy, gules, gynecomaniacal, hand-in-hand, hard-core,
hasty, hearty, heated, heavy, hectic, hepped up over, het, het up,
high-seasoned, high-tension, hipped on, horny, hot about,
hot as fire, hot as hell, hot as pepper, hot-air-heated,
hot-blooded, hot-tempered, hotheaded, hotted up, hunky-dory,
hyperpyretic, hyperthermic, hysteromaniacal, impassioned,
in a fever, in earnest, in flight, in heat, in must, in rut,
incarmined, infected, inflamed, infrared, intense, intent,
intent on, intimate, intoxicated, iron-red, irradiated, itching,
ithyphallic, jam-up, jazz, jazzed up, jazzy, just dandy, keen,
lake-colored, laky, lascivious, lateritious, lecherous, lewd,
libidinous, lickerish, like a furnace, like an oven, live, lively,
lobster-red, loyal, lubricious, lurid, lustful, mad about, madcap,
maroon, marvy, mean, mild, must, musty, near, near the mark,
nearing, nearish, neat, nifty, nigh, nighish, nippy, nobby,
nuts about, nuts on, nymphomaniacal, obscene, oil-heated, okay,
on fire, on the lam, orgasmic, orgastic, out of sight, overheated,
overwarm, parching, passionate, peachy, peachy-keen, peppery,
perfervid, pilfered, piping hot, pirated, plagiarized, poisoned,
port-wine, priapic, propinque, proximal, proximate, prurient, puce,
purloined, pyretic, quick, quick-tempered, racy, radiferous,
radioactivated, radioactive, radioluminescent, ragtime, ragtimey,
randy, rechauffe, recooked, red, red-dyed, red-hot, red-looking,
reddened, reddish, reddish-amber, reddish-brown, reheated,
resolute, ripping, roasting, rubicund, rubiginous, rubric,
rubricose, ruby, ruby-colored, ruby-red, ruddied, ruddy, rufescent,
rufous, rum, runaway, rust, rust-red, rusty, rutting, ruttish,
rutty, salacious, satyric, scalding, scarlet, scorching,
scrumptious, searing, seasoned, seething, sensual, serious,
sex-starved, sexual, sexually excited, sexy, short-tempered,
side-by-side, simmering, sincere, sizzling, sizzling hot, slap-up,
smashing, smoking hot, smoldering, snappy, solid, something else,
spiced, spicy, spiffing, spiffy, spirited, spottable, spunky,
stammel, starry-eyed over, steam-heated, steamed up about,
steaming, steamy, stolen, stunning, sudorific, sultry, summery,
super, superheated, sweating, sweaty, swell, sweltering, sweltry,
swingy, syncopated, tangy, tile-red, toasting, torrid,
totally committed, tough, tropic, tropical, turned-on,
unrestrained, unsatisfied, vehement, vermilion, vicinal, vigorous,
vinaceous, volcanic, warm, warmed, warmed up, warmed-over,
white-hot, wild about, wine-colored, wine-red, with a kick, wizard,
zealous, zestful, zesty, zippy



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  • HOT Definition Meaning - Merriam-Webster
    The meaning of HOT is having a relatively high temperature How to use hot in a sentence
  • hot adjective - Definition, pictures, pronunciation and usage notes . . .
    Definition of hot adjective from the Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary having a high temperature; producing heat It's hot today, isn't it? It was hot and getting hotter Do you like this hot weather? It was the hottest July on record Be careful—the plates are hot All rooms have hot and cold water I'll feel better after a hot bath
  • HOT | English meaning - Cambridge Dictionary
    HOT definition: 1 having a high temperature: 2 used to describe food that causes a burning feeling in the mouth… Learn more
  • Hot - definition of hot by The Free Dictionary
    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"
  • HOT definition in American English | Collins English Dictionary
    Hot is used to describe the weather or the air in a room or building when the temperature is high It was too hot even for a gentle stroll If you are hot, you feel as if your body is at an unpleasantly high temperature I was too hot and tired to eat more than a few mouthfuls
  • Hot: Definition, Meaning, and Examples - US Dictionary
    Hot (adjective): Slang for sexually attractive or desirable The term "hot" is multifaceted, covering a vast range of definitions that span from temperature-related contexts to the world of fashion, emotions, and even attractiveness
  • hot - WordReference. com Dictionary of English
    hot (hot), USA pronunciation adj , hot•ter, hot•test, adv , v , hot•ted, hot•ting, n adj having or giving off heat; having a high temperature: a hot fire; hot coffee Physiology having or causing a sensation of great bodily heat; attended with or producing such a sensation: He was hot with fever
  • Hot Definition Meaning - YourDictionary
    Hot definition: Being at or exhibiting a temperature that is higher than normal or desirable
  • Hot vs. Warm: What’s the Difference?
    Hot refers to a high temperature, often uncomfortably so, while warm denotes a moderately high temperature that is pleasant and cozy
  • Heat and Humidity Wave Across America: 6 Tips to Stay Safe - TODAY
    So, it’s best to stay indoors as much as possible when it’s hot or humid out — especially between 10 am and 4 pm, Sharma advises Adapt Gradually When it’s especially humid out, “pursue





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