catch\ cold

catch\ cold
v. phr.
1. or take cold
To get a common cold-weather sickness that causes a running nose, sneezing, and sometimes sore throat and fever or other symptoms.

Don't get your feet wet or you'll catch cold.

2. informal To catch unprepared or not ready for a question or unexpected happening.

I had not studied my lesson carefully, and the teacher's question caught me cold.

The opposing team was big and sure of winning, and they were caught cold by the fast, hard playing of our smaller players.


Словарь американских идиом. — СПб., Изд-во "Лань". . 1997.

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Look at other dictionaries:

  • catch cold — verb come down with a cold • Hypernyms: ↑catch • Verb Frames: Somebody s * * * catch cold 1. To contract a cold 2. To make an unexpected loss • • • Main Entry: ↑ …   Useful english dictionary

  • catch cold — {v. phr.} 1. or[take cold] To get a common cold weather sickness that causes a running nose, sneezing, and sometimes sore throat and fever or other symptoms. * /Don t get your feet wet or you ll catch cold./ 2. {informal} To catch unprepared or… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • catch cold — {v. phr.} 1. or[take cold] To get a common cold weather sickness that causes a running nose, sneezing, and sometimes sore throat and fever or other symptoms. * /Don t get your feet wet or you ll catch cold./ 2. {informal} To catch unprepared or… …   Dictionary of American idioms

  • catch cold — catch (someone) cold American to surprise someone with an event, a question, or a piece of news they are not expecting. You caught me cold with this news I didn t know anything about it …   New idioms dictionary

  • catch cold — get a cold, come down with a cold, became infected with a cold …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Catch — Catch, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Caught}or {Catched}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Catching}. Catched is rarely used.] [OE. cacchen, OF. cachier, dialectic form of chacier to hunt, F. chasser, fr. (assumend) LL. captiare, for L. capture, V. intens. of capere to… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • catch a cold — (catch cold) be sick with a cold, come down with a cold    I caught a cold while we were in Vancouver …   English idioms

  • cold — [kōld] adj. [ME < OE (Anglian) cald < IE base * gel , cold > COOL, Ger kalt, L gelidus] 1. of a temperature significantly or noticeably lower than average, normal, expected, or comfortable; very chilly; frigid [a cold wind] 2. a) without …   English World dictionary

  • cold — [[t]ko͟ʊld[/t]] ♦♦ colder, coldest, colds 1) ADJ GRADED Something that is cold has a very low temperature or a lower temperature than is normal or acceptable. Rinse the vegetables under cold running water... He likes his tea neither too hot nor… …   English dictionary

  • cold — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 lack of heat; low temperature ADJECTIVE ▪ biting, bitter, extreme, freezing ▪ winter VERB + COLD ▪ feel …   Collocations dictionary

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