warmed-up
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warmed-up — adj if you are warmed up, you have done a set of gentle exercises to prepare your body for playing a sport, dancing etc … Dictionary of contemporary English
warmed-up — [ ,wɔrmd ʌp ] adjective 1. ) ready to do a sport or other activity 2. ) BRITISH WARMED OVER for eating … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English
Warmed — Warm Warm, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Warmed}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Warming}.] [AS. wearmian. See {Warm}, a.] [1913 Webster] 1. To communicate a moderate degree of heat to; to render warm; to supply or furnish heat to; as, a stove warms an apartment. [1913 … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
warmed-up — ▶ adjective 1 a warmed up pasty: REHEATED; N. Amer. warmed over. 2 warmed up ideas: UNORIGINAL, derivative, imitative, uninspired; copied, plagiarized, rehashed; hackneyed … Useful english dictionary
warmed — un·warmed; warmed; … English syllables
warmed — adjective having been warmed up (Freq. 1) a cup of warmed milk • Similar to: ↑warm … Useful english dictionary
warmed-up — adjective warmed over … Wiktionary
warmed-up — UK [ˌwɔː(r)md ˈʌp] / US [ˌwɔrmd ˈʌp] adjective 1) ready to do a sport or other activity 2) warmed up food had gone cold but has been heated again to make it warm enough to eat … English dictionary
warmed-over — adj [usually before noun] AmE 1.) warmed over food has been cooked before and then heated again for eating →↑reheat 2.) warmed over ideas or arguments have been used before and are not interesting or useful any more →look/feel like death warmed… … Dictionary of contemporary English
warmed-over — warmed o|ver [ ,wɔrmd ouvər ] adjective AMERICAN 1. ) warmed over ideas or arguments are not new or original 2. ) warmed over food had gone cold but has been heated again to make it warm enough to eat … Usage of the words and phrases in modern English