Why is there a lukewarm but no lukecool?
Why is there a lukewarm but no lukecool?
Why is there a lukewarm but no lukecool?
Looks Luke cool to me.
What we have here is a failure to communicate.
I can eat 50 eggs.
Same reason there’s no Warm Hand Luke
Because it sounds like a porno title?
If my friend says he can eat 50 eggs...
Are you friends with @Artyom@lemm.ee?
there is, tepid.
Reminds me of Lost Positives by Rob Words. Disgruntled. what about gruntled?
Thanks for that link. Love discovering good educational channels.
Because everyone who has seen Star Wars already knows Luke is cool. It goes without saying.
I dunno. If throwing up means to puke, then throwing down must mean to ...
Yeah, English is a weird language isn't it 😂
Duke!
🤛💪
Damn you, good response!
I throw down with my food sometimes
Bcs Luke was never ever cool.
If you want to convey that something is cool af use Jean-Luc.
I'd agree with the other response that tepid is the best word for this, but if you don't like that one you could use chilly, chill, brisk, or even just the word cool. The word cool implies on its own something that's just slightly cold.
But warm implies something slightly hot.
Hot → warm → lukewarm → room temperature
\
Cold → cool → ??? → room temperature
I have a few observations
Tepid
Because it doesn't looks cool
Lukewarm is French for moderately warm
I sometimes call water lookcool. To me its the really good drinking temp.
Our reference is warmth. Thermometers measure the activity of atoms which is proportional to temperature.
Since I don't see it addressed yet:
“luke” derived from “lew” or “lewk” or “leuk”, in Middle English, which meant “tepid” (slightly warm). This in turn came from the Old English adverb “hlēowe”, which means “warm or sunny”. Finally, “hlēowe” came from the Proto-Germanic *hlēwaz, meaning “warm”.
The word “lukewarm” popped up around the 14th century as meaning “slightly warm”. Within two centuries, it also began having a figurative meaning, that of “lacking in enthusiasm”.
Cite: https://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2012/08/origin-of-the-word-lukewarm/
So lukewarm means "warm warm", except the repetition is basically the opposite of palilogia 🤣
It's basically just East Timor/Timor-Leste, both meaning "east east".
This time, instead of "east", it's "warm".
I always thought it came from that bible verse where Jesus says that if your faith is lukewarm he will spit you out of his mouth. I figured he was insulting Luke