Dictionary.com
Thesaurus.com
Synonyms

cool

American  
[kool] / kul /

adjective

cooler, comparative coolest superlative
  1. moderately cold; neither warm nor cold.

    a rather cool evening.

    Antonyms:
    warm
  2. feeling comfortably or moderately cold.

    I'm perfectly cool, but open the window if you feel hot.

  3. imparting a sensation of moderate coldness or comfortable freedom from heat.

    a cool breeze.

    Antonyms:
    warm
  4. permitting such a sensation.

    a cool dress.

    Antonyms:
    warm
  5. not excited; calm; composed; under control.

    to remain cool in the face of disaster.

    Synonyms:
    quiet, placid, unruffled, self-possessed, collected
  6. not hasty; deliberate.

    a cool and calculated action.

  7. lacking in interest or enthusiasm.

    a cool reply to an invitation.

    Synonyms:
    lukewarm, remote, reserved, apathetic, distant
    Antonyms:
    warm
  8. lacking in warmth or cordiality.

    a cool reception.

    Synonyms:
    lukewarm, remote, reserved, apathetic, distant
    Antonyms:
    warm
  9. calmly audacious or impudent.

    a cool lie.

  10. aloof or unresponsive; indifferent.

    He was cool to her passionate advances.

  11. unaffected by emotions; disinterested; dispassionate.

    She made a cool appraisal of all the issues in the dispute.

  12. Informal. (of a number or sum) without exaggeration or qualification.

    a cool million dollars.

  13. (of colors) with green, blue, or violet predominating.

  14. Slang.

    1. great; fine; excellent.

      a real cool comic.

    2. characterized by great facility; highly skilled or clever.

      cool maneuvers on the parallel bars.

    3. socially adept.

      It's not cool to arrive at a party too early.

    4. acceptable; satisfactory; okay.

      If you want to stay late, that's cool.


adverb

  1. Informal. coolly.

interjection

  1. Slang.

    1. (used to express acceptance).

      Okay, cool! I'll be there at 10:00.

    2. (used to express approval, admiration, etc.).

      He got the job? Cool!

noun

  1. something that is cool; a cool part, place, time, etc..

    in the cool of the evening.

  2. coolness.

  3. calmness; composure; poise.

    an executive noted for maintaining her cool under pressure.

verb (used without object)

cools, present (3rd person singular) cooled, past participle, past cooling present participle
  1. to become cool (sometimes followed by down oroff ).

    The soup cooled in five minutes. We cooled off in the mountain stream.

  2. to become less ardent, cordial, etc.; become moderate.

verb (used with object)

cools, present (3rd person singular) cooled, past participle, past cooling present participle
  1. to make cool; impart a sensation of coolness to.

  2. to lessen the ardor or intensity of; allay; calm; moderate.

    Disappointment cooled his early zealousness.

    Synonyms:
    abate, temper

verb phrase

  1. cool off to become calmer or more reasonable.

    Wait until he cools off before you talk to him again.

  2. cool down. see cooldown.

  3. cool out to calm or settle down; relax.

    cooling out at the beach.

idioms

  1. blow one's cool. blow.

  2. cool one's heels. heel.

  3. cool it, calm down; take it easy.

cool British  
/ kuːl /

adjective

  1. moderately cold

    a cool day

  2. comfortably free of heat

    a cool room

  3. producing a pleasant feeling of coldness

    a cool shirt

  4. able to conceal emotion; calm

    a cool head

  5. lacking in enthusiasm, affection, cordiality, etc

    a cool welcome

  6. calmly audacious or impudent

  7. informal (esp of numbers, sums of money, etc) without exaggeration; actual

    a cool ten thousand

  8. (of a colour) having violet, blue, or green predominating; cold

  9. (of jazz) characteristic of the late 1940s and early 1950s, economical and rhythmically relaxed

  10. informal sophisticated or elegant, esp in an unruffled way

  11. informal excellent; marvellous

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

adverb

  1. not_standard in a cool manner; coolly

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

noun

  1. coolness

    the cool of the evening

  2. slang calmness; composure (esp in the phrases keep or lose one's cool )

  3. slang unruffled elegance or sophistication

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

verb

  1. to make or become cooler

  2. to lessen the intensity of (anger or excitement) or (of anger or excitement) to become less intense; calm down

  3. slang (usually imperative) to calm down; take it easy

  4. to wait or be kept waiting

"Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged" 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012
cool More Idioms  

    More idioms and phrases containing cool


Synonym Usage

See cold. See calm.

Other Word Forms

Derived Forms

Inflected Forms

Adjectives

Participles

Conjugated Forms

Present

Past

Future

Etymology

Origin of cool

First recorded before 1000; Middle English col, coul, Old English cōl; cognate with Middle Low German kōl, Old High German kuoli, German kühl; see cold, chill

Explanation

When the weather is cool, it's not quite cold but not warm either. When people are cool, they're mellow and in control. Cool has many meanings. When the weather goes from 70 degrees to 50, it cooled off. A winning pool player who starts losing also cools off. Drinking lemonade on a hot day is yet another way to cool off. When you lose your temper, you lose your cool. Hot cookies should cool before you eat them. Something fashionable is cool, but if you're cool to an idea, you're not so sure about it. Any situation that becomes less intense has cooled.

Keep Reading on Vocabulary.com

Vocabulary lists containing cool

Example Sentences

Examples are provided to illustrate real-world usage of words in context. Any opinions expressed do not reflect the views of Dictionary.com.

See Examples For:

OK cool, but I’m not memorizing a dozen names.

From Slate Jul. 16, 2026

But it could only be a brief cool down because high pressure is currently forecast to build back over the UK again next week.

From BBC Jul. 15, 2026

Wholesale prices dropped last month, with June’s decline in energy prices helping to cool down the prices charged by producers.

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 15, 2026

Conditions are expected to cool off by 5 to 7 degrees on Thursday and then return to nearly normal by Friday, Wofford said.

From Los Angeles Times Jul. 15, 2026

It’s cool, but sunny, so I get a couple of chairs and a blanket for Bubbe, and we sit side by side in the sunshine.

From "Code Name Kingfisher" by Liz Kessler

“One of the cooler moments I’ve ever been a part of on the baseball field,” Freeman said.

From Los Angeles Times Jul. 15, 2026

When the temperature difference diminishes between the warmer western Pacific and the cooler eastern Pacific, the typical east-to-west trade winds decrease even further.

From Los Angeles Times Jul. 13, 2026

Jay Ternavan, founder of JayWay Travel, said more Americans are interested in summer vacations to Scandinavia, where temperatures are cooler.

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 12, 2026

Dominic typically opts for reds from cooler climates like Austria or Germany.

From BBC Jul. 12, 2026

Coach Quinn pulled out a large cooler from the back of her truck.

From "The Missing Mitt (The Hardy Boys: Secret Files, #2)" by Franklin W. Dixon

MT: How do you feel about Gen X’s legacy as basically the coolest generation?

From Los Angeles Times Jun. 25, 2026

Apps can show commuters the coolest way to work, not just the fastest.

From The Wall Street Journal Jun. 24, 2026

"Feels like" temperatures may be even more noteworthy during the overnight period, when it may feel like 27C even at the coolest part of the night.

From BBC Jun. 24, 2026

He noted that he wanted his Futurecave to become “the coolest house ever built.”

From MarketWatch Jun. 22, 2026

“I get it. You’re very, very cool. You’re the coolest girl I’ve ever met.”

From "The Miseducation of Cameron Post" by emily m. danforth

Inside a climate-controlled chamber, a standard fridge is fitted with sensors and filled with gel blocks to measure how evenly it cools.

From BBC Jul. 2, 2026

Even when using the same mold, color can vary from batch to batch, and how it cools also affects the result.

From Los Angeles Times Jul. 1, 2026

Analysts at 22V Research said in a recent report that the valuation gap should narrow a bit going forward as they expect longer term bond yields to slide as the economy cools slightly.

From Barron's Jun. 30, 2026

But some economists say a productivity boom only cools prices if it arrives as a surprise.

From The Wall Street Journal Jun. 19, 2026

It never cools the room much, but when there's no electricity and it can't even move a tiny bit of air, I feel like a grain of rice boiling in my own sweat.

From "Born Behind Bars" by Padma Venkatraman

China’s economic growth cooled more than expected in the second quarter of the year despite robust exports, as local governments and households pulled back spending.

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 15, 2026

Ducted air con: These systems are designed to serve the entire home, with a central unit pushing cooled air through a network of ducting, with vents in each room.

From BBC Jul. 9, 2026

Superconductors allow electric current to flow without losing energy, but only when cooled to extremely low temperatures where quantum effects emerge.

From Science Daily Jul. 7, 2026

When players cooled themselves with cold drinks and icy towels during short breaks and took longer halftimes, their core temperatures and cardiovascular strain lowered considerably more than they did after only passive breaks, Brown wrote.

From Los Angeles Times Jul. 7, 2026

Which meant he was right and she’d come back after she cooled off.

From "P.S. Be Eleven" by Rita Williams-Garcia

Official data released this week showed consumer inflation at 3.5 percent in June, cooling from May's reading on lower energy prices amid hopes of a US-Iran deal.

From Barron's Jul. 15, 2026

Fresh signs of cooling U.S. inflation revived demand for Treasurys, pushing yields down.

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 15, 2026

Rahmstorf accepts that global warming could soften the cooling effect in average temperatures.

From BBC Jul. 14, 2026

But he tied that to inflation cooling over the second half of the year.

From The Wall Street Journal Jul. 13, 2026

I bustled myself inside, and soon there were four chokecherry pies cooling on the kitchen table—if it were possible to cool in this blamed heat.

From "Hattie Big Sky" by Kirby Larson

Vocabulary.com logo
by dictionary.com

Dictionary.com's Learning Companion

Go beyond just looking up words.
Remember them forever with VocabTrainer.

Start training