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hot
adjective as in very high in temperature
Strongest matches
blazing, boiling, heated, humid, red, scorching, sizzling, sultry, sweltering, torrid, tropical, warm, white
Weak matches
baking, blistering, broiling, burning, calescent, close, decalescent, febrile, fevered, feverish, feverous, fiery, flaming, igneous, incandescent, like an oven, on fire, ovenlike, parching, piping, recalescent, roasting, scalding, searing, smoking, steaming, stuffy, summery, sweltry, thermogenic, tropic, very warm
adjective as in spicy to taste
adjective as in passionate, vehement
adjective as in new, in vogue
adjective as in sexually excited
Weak matches
aroused, carnal, concupiscent, erotic, lascivious, lewd, libidinous, lustful, passionate, prurient, salacious, sensual
Example Sentences
It didn't really feel like Christmas because it was hot and I was contemplating how I was going to bowl to Hashim Amla, AB de Villiers and the rest the following day.
"They think something is hot if the man they are with thinks it's hot."
They were sending a message that nothing, be it freezing temperatures or future Hall of Famer Rodgers, could keep the Rams from continuing their hot streak and drive to the playoffs.
California has been a hot zone for the H5N1 outbreak, representing the vast majority of infected cattle herds, and more than half the people sickened by the virus.
As the air becomes hotter, it becomes easier for plants to lose water to transpiration, especially because photosynthesis occurs during daylight hours when temperatures are highest.
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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.
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