The relative clause is 'whose hands were colder than the rest' which 'relates' information about its antecedent 'man'. The relative pronoun 'whose' is functioning as an adjective to describe the noun 'hands'.
The nose becomes colder than other parts of the face during the winter because it is often not covered up. It also has mucous inside of it, which helps keep it colder as well.
No. Actually, the friction that you are creating inside the carton is likely to make the milk warmer. The best way to make your milk colder is to put it in the refrigerator. -- No - if anything, the agitation of the molecules will increase their temperature slightly. It may feel that it get colder as the milk moves about and the parts of the container you are touching might have colder milk move under it.
Because the temperature inside the refrigerator is colder than the temperature outside
oceanic as it is colder; therefore denser
Its cold...
Colder is an adjective. It's the comparative form of cold.
It is getting colder outside. It's colder in here than it is out there. My beer is colder.
No, the word 'colder' is an adjective, the comparative form of the adjective cold (colder, coldest).The word 'cold' is both an adjective and a noun.The noun 'cold' is a word for a condition of low temperature; a word for a common viral infection which inflames the mucous membrane of the nose and throat; a word for a thing.The noun form of the adjective 'cold' is coldness.
It got colder and colder each day after the very big blizzard.
Example sentence - It can be colder in the valley due to the temperature inversion in the winter.
Example sentence - It can be colder in the valley due to the temperature inversion in the winter.
You can insulate your home to keep it warmer in winter and colder in summer.
When the weather started getting colder, I put a quilt on my bed.
And example of a sentence using the term density current might be this one: The water in the north was much colder than the basin water, and this colder water, because it was more dense than the seawater in the basin, created a density current that caused the cold water to flow into the lower area of the basin.
Colder, much colder.
The literary device in this sentence is a simile. It compares the coldness of the lemonade to the extreme coldness of an iceberg in the Arctic using the word "than" to establish the relationship.
It is defrost.