get hot
发热,升温,热起来,变热
Related Words
Definitions
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hot·ter, hot·test.
- : having or giving off heat; having a high temperature: a hot fire; hot coffee.
- : having or causing a sensation of great bodily heat; attended with or producing such a sensation: He was hot with fever.
- : creating a burning sensation, as on the skin or in the throat: This ointment is hot, so apply it sparingly.
- : sharply peppery or pungent: Is this mustard hot?
- : having or showing intense or violent feeling; ardent; fervent; vehement; excited: a hot temper.
- : Informal. having a strong enthusiasm; eager: a hot baseball fan.
- : Slang. sexually aroused; lustful.sexy; attractive.
- : violent, furious, or intense: the hottest battle of the war.
- : strong or fresh, as a scent or trail.
- : absolutely new; fresh: a dozen new mystery stories hot from the press.
- : requiring immediate delivery or correspondence; demanding priority: The hot freight must be delivered by 10:00 a.m. tomorrow, or we'll lose the contract.
- : Slang. skillful in a reckless or daring way: a hot pilot.
- : following very closely; close: to be hot on the trail of a thief.
- : extremely intense: hot pink.
- : Informal. popular and commercially successful; in demand; marketable: The Beatles were a hot group in the 1960s.
- : Slang. extremely lucky, good, or favorable: A poker player has to have a hot hand to win the pot.
- : Slang. playing well or winningly; scoring effectively: a hot pitcher.
- : Slang. funny; absurd: That's a hot one!
- : Games. close to the object or answer that is being sought.
- : Informal. extremely exciting or interesting; sensational or scandalous: a hot news story.
- : Jazz. emotionally intense, propulsive, and marked by aggressive attack and warm, full tone. skilled in playing hot jazz.
- : Informal. capable of attaining extremely high speeds: a hot new jet plane.
- : Slang. stolen recently or otherwise illegal and dangerous to possess: a hot diamond necklace.wanted by the police.dangerous.
- : Informal. in the mood to perform exceedingly well, or rapidly, as during a burst of creative work: Finish writing that story while you're still hot.
- : actively conducting an electric current or containing a high voltage: a hot wire.
- : of, relating to, or noting radioactivity.
- : Metalworking. noting any process involving plastic deformation of a metal at a temperature high enough to permit recrystallization due to the strain: hot working.
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- : in a hot manner; hotly.
- : while hot: Garnish the potatoes with parsley and serve hot.
- : Metalworking. at a temperature high enough to permit recrystallization: The wire was drawn hot.
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hot·ted, hot·ting.
- : Chiefly British Informal. to heat; warm.
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- : the hots, Slang. intense sexual desire or attraction.
Phrases
- hot air
- hot and bothered
- hot and heavy
- hot as blazes
- hot dog
- hot line
- hot number
- hot off the press
- hot on
- hot potato
- hot rod
- hot seat, in the
- hot stuff
- hot to trot
- hot under the collar
- hot water
- blow hot and cold
- like a cat on hot bricks
- like hot cakes
- make it hot for
- piping hot
- strike while the iron's hot
Synonyms & Antonyms
Examples
In almost every day in September so far, Brazil has had twice the number of hot spots as the US, according to the Greenpeace Global Fire Dashboard, which identifies fire activity using NASA satellite data.
Whether your cord is made from nylon or polyester, both plastics will burn once they are hot enough.
If you can’t bear to sip a piping hot mug of dark roast on a scorching day, we understand.
They are all joined by legions of other hot startups, like Panoply, Incorta, and Yellowbrick.
Their interest suggested a growing investor-grade nervousness about swiftly mounting environmental risk in the hottest real estate markets in the country.
Gay marriage was the hot-button fight on the left and right.
Everybody is trapped in an elevator together and tempers run a little hot.
Even the hot Jewish women I mentioned above did something a bit more “intellectual” than pageantry: acting.
There was deep brown flesh, and bronze flesh, and pallid white flesh, and flesh turned red from the hot sun.
Many Jewish women have been accepted as conventional, mainstream hot.
In the drawing-room things went on much as they always do in country drawing-rooms in the hot weather.
“You appear to feel it so,” rejoined Mr. Pickwick, smiling at the clerk, who was literally red-hot.
Nearly half the regiment ran to secure their picketed horses, armed themselves in hot haste, and galloped to the gaol.
News came that the rebels were plundering the British quarters, and the infantry went there in hot haste.
From Canada on the north, to Texas on the south, the hot winds had laid the land seemingly bare.