what does âit looks warmerâ mean?
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A: Which one of these sweaters do you like?
B: I like the green one. It looks warmer.
Does it mean: Among the group of the sweaters, the green one seems to produce more warmth?
The dictionary lists friendly as a synonym for warm, could that be the case?
word-meaning
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up vote
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A: Which one of these sweaters do you like?
B: I like the green one. It looks warmer.
Does it mean: Among the group of the sweaters, the green one seems to produce more warmth?
The dictionary lists friendly as a synonym for warm, could that be the case?
word-meaning
2
Sara, in all seriousness, how could a sweater look friendly? That is the second meaning......:)
â Lambie
5 hours ago
1
Sweaters don't 'produce' warmth; they allow the wearer to retain the heat produced by their own body.
â Michael Harvey
5 hours ago
2
@ Lambie I thought maybe the green color can be described as friendly? :)
â Sara
5 hours ago
add a comment |Â
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
A: Which one of these sweaters do you like?
B: I like the green one. It looks warmer.
Does it mean: Among the group of the sweaters, the green one seems to produce more warmth?
The dictionary lists friendly as a synonym for warm, could that be the case?
word-meaning
A: Which one of these sweaters do you like?
B: I like the green one. It looks warmer.
Does it mean: Among the group of the sweaters, the green one seems to produce more warmth?
The dictionary lists friendly as a synonym for warm, could that be the case?
word-meaning
word-meaning
asked 6 hours ago
Sara
1,2541725
1,2541725
2
Sara, in all seriousness, how could a sweater look friendly? That is the second meaning......:)
â Lambie
5 hours ago
1
Sweaters don't 'produce' warmth; they allow the wearer to retain the heat produced by their own body.
â Michael Harvey
5 hours ago
2
@ Lambie I thought maybe the green color can be described as friendly? :)
â Sara
5 hours ago
add a comment |Â
2
Sara, in all seriousness, how could a sweater look friendly? That is the second meaning......:)
â Lambie
5 hours ago
1
Sweaters don't 'produce' warmth; they allow the wearer to retain the heat produced by their own body.
â Michael Harvey
5 hours ago
2
@ Lambie I thought maybe the green color can be described as friendly? :)
â Sara
5 hours ago
2
2
Sara, in all seriousness, how could a sweater look friendly? That is the second meaning......:)
â Lambie
5 hours ago
Sara, in all seriousness, how could a sweater look friendly? That is the second meaning......:)
â Lambie
5 hours ago
1
1
Sweaters don't 'produce' warmth; they allow the wearer to retain the heat produced by their own body.
â Michael Harvey
5 hours ago
Sweaters don't 'produce' warmth; they allow the wearer to retain the heat produced by their own body.
â Michael Harvey
5 hours ago
2
2
@ Lambie I thought maybe the green color can be described as friendly? :)
â Sara
5 hours ago
@ Lambie I thought maybe the green color can be described as friendly? :)
â Sara
5 hours ago
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
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Colors can be described as cool or warm.
They chose warm colors for the living room.
Warm colors have reds in them. Cool colors have blues in them.
But here, in the context of a sweater, the sweater's ability to keep the wearer warm is most likely the subject, especially since green is not a warm color.
When we say that a sweater or coat "looks warm" we mean that it looks as though it will keep the wearer warm.
Don't wear that (ready-warmed?) sweater hanging up by the fire! I know it's cold in the garage, but there's a much warmer sweater out there.
â FumbleFingers
3 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: It could be a cotton sweater warming by the fire and a woolen sweater chilling in the garage.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Indeed. It's not that easy to come up with a credible context where a warm(er) sweater refers to its current temperature, rather than the fact that it will keep the wearer warm(er). But I think I managed to imply it there.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: But no sweater would "look" warmer in that sense, not unless it were smoldering and about to catch fire because it had been hung too close to the fire. Here, wear this one. It looks warmer. Don't mind the smoke.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Ignoring actual temperature completely, if colour was the main contextually-relevant attribute, the "warmer" top could be an orange t-shirt, to be preferred over the "cooler-looking" blue fox fur topcoat.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
add a comment |Â
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
3
down vote
Colors can be described as cool or warm.
They chose warm colors for the living room.
Warm colors have reds in them. Cool colors have blues in them.
But here, in the context of a sweater, the sweater's ability to keep the wearer warm is most likely the subject, especially since green is not a warm color.
When we say that a sweater or coat "looks warm" we mean that it looks as though it will keep the wearer warm.
Don't wear that (ready-warmed?) sweater hanging up by the fire! I know it's cold in the garage, but there's a much warmer sweater out there.
â FumbleFingers
3 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: It could be a cotton sweater warming by the fire and a woolen sweater chilling in the garage.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Indeed. It's not that easy to come up with a credible context where a warm(er) sweater refers to its current temperature, rather than the fact that it will keep the wearer warm(er). But I think I managed to imply it there.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: But no sweater would "look" warmer in that sense, not unless it were smoldering and about to catch fire because it had been hung too close to the fire. Here, wear this one. It looks warmer. Don't mind the smoke.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Ignoring actual temperature completely, if colour was the main contextually-relevant attribute, the "warmer" top could be an orange t-shirt, to be preferred over the "cooler-looking" blue fox fur topcoat.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
Colors can be described as cool or warm.
They chose warm colors for the living room.
Warm colors have reds in them. Cool colors have blues in them.
But here, in the context of a sweater, the sweater's ability to keep the wearer warm is most likely the subject, especially since green is not a warm color.
When we say that a sweater or coat "looks warm" we mean that it looks as though it will keep the wearer warm.
Don't wear that (ready-warmed?) sweater hanging up by the fire! I know it's cold in the garage, but there's a much warmer sweater out there.
â FumbleFingers
3 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: It could be a cotton sweater warming by the fire and a woolen sweater chilling in the garage.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Indeed. It's not that easy to come up with a credible context where a warm(er) sweater refers to its current temperature, rather than the fact that it will keep the wearer warm(er). But I think I managed to imply it there.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: But no sweater would "look" warmer in that sense, not unless it were smoldering and about to catch fire because it had been hung too close to the fire. Here, wear this one. It looks warmer. Don't mind the smoke.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Ignoring actual temperature completely, if colour was the main contextually-relevant attribute, the "warmer" top could be an orange t-shirt, to be preferred over the "cooler-looking" blue fox fur topcoat.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
add a comment |Â
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
Colors can be described as cool or warm.
They chose warm colors for the living room.
Warm colors have reds in them. Cool colors have blues in them.
But here, in the context of a sweater, the sweater's ability to keep the wearer warm is most likely the subject, especially since green is not a warm color.
When we say that a sweater or coat "looks warm" we mean that it looks as though it will keep the wearer warm.
Colors can be described as cool or warm.
They chose warm colors for the living room.
Warm colors have reds in them. Cool colors have blues in them.
But here, in the context of a sweater, the sweater's ability to keep the wearer warm is most likely the subject, especially since green is not a warm color.
When we say that a sweater or coat "looks warm" we mean that it looks as though it will keep the wearer warm.
answered 4 hours ago
Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
97.3k671161
97.3k671161
Don't wear that (ready-warmed?) sweater hanging up by the fire! I know it's cold in the garage, but there's a much warmer sweater out there.
â FumbleFingers
3 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: It could be a cotton sweater warming by the fire and a woolen sweater chilling in the garage.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Indeed. It's not that easy to come up with a credible context where a warm(er) sweater refers to its current temperature, rather than the fact that it will keep the wearer warm(er). But I think I managed to imply it there.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: But no sweater would "look" warmer in that sense, not unless it were smoldering and about to catch fire because it had been hung too close to the fire. Here, wear this one. It looks warmer. Don't mind the smoke.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Ignoring actual temperature completely, if colour was the main contextually-relevant attribute, the "warmer" top could be an orange t-shirt, to be preferred over the "cooler-looking" blue fox fur topcoat.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
add a comment |Â
Don't wear that (ready-warmed?) sweater hanging up by the fire! I know it's cold in the garage, but there's a much warmer sweater out there.
â FumbleFingers
3 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: It could be a cotton sweater warming by the fire and a woolen sweater chilling in the garage.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Indeed. It's not that easy to come up with a credible context where a warm(er) sweater refers to its current temperature, rather than the fact that it will keep the wearer warm(er). But I think I managed to imply it there.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: But no sweater would "look" warmer in that sense, not unless it were smoldering and about to catch fire because it had been hung too close to the fire. Here, wear this one. It looks warmer. Don't mind the smoke.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Ignoring actual temperature completely, if colour was the main contextually-relevant attribute, the "warmer" top could be an orange t-shirt, to be preferred over the "cooler-looking" blue fox fur topcoat.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
Don't wear that (ready-warmed?) sweater hanging up by the fire! I know it's cold in the garage, but there's a much warmer sweater out there.
â FumbleFingers
3 hours ago
Don't wear that (ready-warmed?) sweater hanging up by the fire! I know it's cold in the garage, but there's a much warmer sweater out there.
â FumbleFingers
3 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: It could be a cotton sweater warming by the fire and a woolen sweater chilling in the garage.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: It could be a cotton sweater warming by the fire and a woolen sweater chilling in the garage.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Indeed. It's not that easy to come up with a credible context where a warm(er) sweater refers to its current temperature, rather than the fact that it will keep the wearer warm(er). But I think I managed to imply it there.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
Indeed. It's not that easy to come up with a credible context where a warm(er) sweater refers to its current temperature, rather than the fact that it will keep the wearer warm(er). But I think I managed to imply it there.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: But no sweater would "look" warmer in that sense, not unless it were smoldering and about to catch fire because it had been hung too close to the fire. Here, wear this one. It looks warmer. Don't mind the smoke.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
@FumbleFingers: But no sweater would "look" warmer in that sense, not unless it were smoldering and about to catch fire because it had been hung too close to the fire. Here, wear this one. It looks warmer. Don't mind the smoke.
â Tá´ÂoïÃÂuo
2 hours ago
Ignoring actual temperature completely, if colour was the main contextually-relevant attribute, the "warmer" top could be an orange t-shirt, to be preferred over the "cooler-looking" blue fox fur topcoat.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
Ignoring actual temperature completely, if colour was the main contextually-relevant attribute, the "warmer" top could be an orange t-shirt, to be preferred over the "cooler-looking" blue fox fur topcoat.
â FumbleFingers
2 hours ago
add a comment |Â
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2
Sara, in all seriousness, how could a sweater look friendly? That is the second meaning......:)
â Lambie
5 hours ago
1
Sweaters don't 'produce' warmth; they allow the wearer to retain the heat produced by their own body.
â Michael Harvey
5 hours ago
2
@ Lambie I thought maybe the green color can be described as friendly? :)
â Sara
5 hours ago