The singular froid et chaud and the plural froids et chauds in the masculine and the singular froide et chaude and the plural froides et chaudes in the feminine are French equivalents of the English phrase "cold and hot." Context makes clear whether one (cases 1, 3) or more (examples 2, 4) of a female (instances 1, 2), male (options 3, 4) or mixed female and male (sample 4) suits. The respective pronunciations will be "fwa ey sho" in the masculine and "fwa-de shod" in the feminine in French.
Il fait très chaud aujourd'hui! is a French equivalent of the English phrase "It is very hot today!" The declaration translates literally as "It (the weather) makes (things) very hot today!" in English. The pronunciation will be "eel feh treh sho-zhoor-dwee" in French.
"dans un pays chaud" means "in a hot country" in French. This is commonly used for countries with a tropical climate.
"Hot peppers" in English is peperoncini in Italian.
Hot
Potage mince Consomme [ con-so-me ]. It can be served hot or cold.
"Hot women" in English is donne calde in Italian.
"Hot coffee" in English is caffè caldo in Italian.
"She's hot!" in English means É bona! in Italian.
"It's hot!" in English means È caldo! in Italian.
The opposite of cold in french is "chaud" meaning hot.
"It would be hot" is an English equivalent of the French phrase Il ferait chaud. The pronunciation of the temperature- and weather-related idiomatic expression in the third person impersonal of the present conditional -- which translates literally as "It would do/make hot" -- will be "eel freh sho" in northerly French and "eel fuh-reh sho" in southerly French.
Gnocca in Italian is "hot chick" in English.