warmth of feeling
101fervour — fer·vour || fÉœrvÉ™(r) / fÉœËv n. intense heat; excitement, ardor, warmth of feeling (alternate spelling of fervor) …
102cordiality — n. Heartiness, sincerity, ardor of affection, warmth of feeling, affectionate regard …
103pathos — n. 1. Passion, warmth of feeling, tender emotion. 2. Pathetic quality, tender tone, patheticalness …
104zeal — n. Ardor, eagerness, engagedness, fervor, fervency, warmth, glow, feeling, energy, earnestness, devotedness, devotion, intentness, intensity, heartiness, cordiality, enthusiasm, passion, soul, spirit …
105amicable — amicable, neighborly, friendly are applied to the attitudes and actions of persons, communities, and states that have intercourse with each other and mean marked by or exhibiting goodwill or absence of antagonism. Amicable frequently implies… …
106glow — n 1. subdued light, glowing, afterglow; incandescence, luminosity, phosphorescence; luster, shine, iridescence; splendor, brilliance, radiance, reful gency, effulgence; illumination, flash, glare, beam, ray, shaft; streak, patch, coruscation,… …
107ardor — ar•dor [[t]ˈɑr dər[/t]] n. 1) great warmth of feeling; fervor 2) intense devotion; zeal 3) burning heat Also, esp. Brit., ar′dour. Etymology: 1350–1400; ME < L, =ārd(ēre) to burn + or or I usage: See or …
108freeze — [[t]friz[/t]] v. froze, fro•zen, freez•ing, n. 1) phs to become hardened into ice or into a solid body; change from the liquid to the solid state by loss of heat 2) phs to become hard or stiffened because of loss of heat 3) to suffer the effects… …
109frigid — frig•id [[t]ˈfrɪdʒ ɪd[/t]] adj. 1) mer very cold in temperature: a frigid climate[/ex] 2) a) without warmth of feeling; without ardor or enthusiasm: a frigid reaction to the proposed law[/ex] b) stiff or formal: a polite but frigid welcome[/ex]… …
110frosty — frost•y [[t]ˈfrɔ sti, ˈfrɒs ti[/t]] adj. frost•i•er, frost•i•est 1) characterized by or producing frost; freezing; very cold 2) consisting of or covered with a frost 3) lacking warmth of feeling 4) white or gray • Etymology: 1350–1400 frost′i•ly …