yes
More people tend to die from extreme heat than from extreme cold. Heat-related illnesses, such as heat stroke, are more common and can be more deadly than cold-related illnesses. Additionally, heat waves can affect larger populations compared to cold spells.
Sort of. In terms of physics, technically there is no such thing as cold. There is only heat, which is than measured on a scale to show how much heat is present. Heat will always transfer to something that has less heat than its present location. So technically no, cold does not absorb heat because cold is a perspective and not something that actually exists.. However, things that have less heat do absorb heat from things with more heat than itself. Cold is an abstract non physics word used to describe things with small amounts of heat, while in reality there is technically at least some measurable amount of heat if compared to true absolute 0 heat.
Heat travels faster than cold. This is because heat is the transfer of energy from a warmer object to a cooler one, which occurs through molecular collisions. Cold, on the other hand, is simply the absence of heat energy.
If the beaker has a cold water, or something else cold, in it than the heat that is in our finger will run out of you finger into the cold water. This leaves your finger 'empty' of heat, giving you the sensation of being cold. You need to remember that only heat moves. When you are cold you wear a jumper that keeps the heat in your body, not keep the cool out.
Cold and heat are related in that they are both forms of thermal energy. Heat is the presence of thermal energy, while cold is the absence of heat. Cold can be defined as a lower level of thermal energy compared to heat.
yes summer time heat can affect your battery worse than the winter cold most batteries fail.cite....
What is worse than a bee with a cold? A bee covered in hives.
It is a declarative sentence.
Yes you can. You can get MUCH worse than it already is. 
Yes when you take sugar when you have a cold, it will make your cold worse.
More people tend to die from extreme heat than from extreme cold. Heat-related illnesses, such as heat stroke, are more common and can be more deadly than cold-related illnesses. Additionally, heat waves can affect larger populations compared to cold spells.
The sentence uses the comparative degree of comparison. This is indicated by the word "worse," which compares the level of heat from yesterday to today, suggesting that yesterday's heat was of a greater intensity than today's.
No
I don't think so because when we have a cold, it is best to keep oneself warm and thus the heater produce heat for us to keep warm. Unless we have a lousy heater which produce cold air instead of heat, haha!
The answer is comparative.
If you mean what comes first in the year, than cold.
Sort of. In terms of physics, technically there is no such thing as cold. There is only heat, which is than measured on a scale to show how much heat is present. Heat will always transfer to something that has less heat than its present location. So technically no, cold does not absorb heat because cold is a perspective and not something that actually exists.. However, things that have less heat do absorb heat from things with more heat than itself. Cold is an abstract non physics word used to describe things with small amounts of heat, while in reality there is technically at least some measurable amount of heat if compared to true absolute 0 heat.