Definition, Meaning & Anagrams | English word COOLS


COOLS

Definitions of COOLS

  1. inflection of cool
  2. plural of Cool.
  3. A Dutch surname from Dutch.

1

Number of letters

5

Is palindrome

No

9
CO
COO
LS
OL
OLS
OO
OOL

4

13

17

62
CL
CLO
CLS
CO
COL
COO
COS
CS
CSL


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Examples of Using COOLS in a Sentence

  • Autumn is the season when the duration of daylight becomes noticeably shorter and the temperature cools considerably.
  • It forms from magma with a high content of silica and alkali metal oxides that slowly cools and solidifies underground.
  • As the exposed surface cools by radiating its heat, atmospheric moisture condenses at a rate greater than that at which it can evaporate, resulting in the formation of water droplets.
  • Winter is relatively long and cold, but cools off later and heats up earlier than more northerly areas of the state.
  • The fall season is drier than the spring and gradually cools down, although warm spells due to the chinook are always possible.
  • As Earth's core cools, the liquid at the inner core boundary freezes, causing the solid inner core to grow at the expense of the outer core, at an estimated rate of 1 mm per year.
  • The classic example of a heat exchanger is found in an internal combustion engine in which a circulating fluid known as engine coolant flows through radiator coils and air flows past the coils, which cools the coolant and heats the incoming air.
  • Camille Cools (1874, Moorslede - 1916, Detroit, USA) was the founder, editor and publisher of the Gazette van Detroit.
  • The lava flowing from stratovolcanoes typically cools and solidifies before spreading far, due to high viscosity.
  • One of them is heating the steel evenly to a red-hot temperature and then cooling part of it quickly, turning that part into very hard martensite while the rest cools more slowly and becomes softer pearlite.
  • A convective layer such as this has the potential for cloud formation, since condensation occurs as the warm air rises and cools.
  • The workpiece and the electrode melts forming a pool of molten metal (weld pool) that cools to form a joint.
  • As this new crust is pushed away from the spreading center by the formation of newer crust, it cools, thins, and becomes denser.
  • The buoyancy theory holds that the sperm whale is capable of heating the spermaceti, lowering its density and thus allowing the whale to float; for the whale to sink again, it must take water into its blowhole, which cools the spermaceti into a denser solid.
  • Her television work included The Upper Crusts (1973) as the daughter of Margaret Leighton and Charles Gray, Van der Valk (1973), The Protectors (1973), Quiller (1975), Who Pays the Ferryman? (1977), as Jill Haydon, daughter of the underworld crime boss William Henry (Bill) Hayden in an episode of the hard-hitting British police drama The Professionals, the episode entitled When the Heat Cools Off (1978) and Hazell (1979).
  • Material for the part is fed into a heated barrel, mixed (using a helical screw), and injected into a mould cavity, where it cools and hardens to the configuration of the cavity.
  • Cumulus clouds are formed by the rising air in a thermal as it ascends and cools, until the water vapor in the air begins to condense into visible droplets.
  • The brass is heated to a molten state and then poured or forced into the mold, where it cools and solidifies into the desired shape.
  • When encountering elevated landforms, the moist air is driven upslope towards the peak, where it expands, cools, and its moisture condenses and starts to precipitate.
  • It is common for the air rising from the tops of large mountains to reach a height where it cools adiabatically to below its dew point and forms cumulus clouds.


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