No necessarily. There are cold deserts where the temperature remains quite mild or even cold in the summer.
Even though the name is cold, it is caused by a virus that can be caught even during the warmer times of year.
Mostly cold. It might even go up to the 70 F to 80 F during the summer.
No, the tundra is cool (sometimes cold) and the air humidity is high and the soils are moist during the short growth period. Even though it gets little precipitation the evaporation rate is low unlike a desert.
No, deserts that are hot during the summer are much cooler in the winter, especially in cold winter deserts.
Antarctica is polar. Both polar climates are 'cold' in 'summer' with temperatures usually below freezing.
Water can contain heat or the lack of it better than the air and ground around it. During winter the water will be heated up by the sun, even though it is cold out, and during the summer the water will retain the cold that it has been exposed to overnight.
In Spain during the summer it is super hot, that you can not stay outside, not even in the shade! In winter time, it's not too cold, but every couple of years, it snows in the northern area.
Mars is very cold even in summer.
Sometimes your body just feels cold sometimes and it could be a cold or a fever.
Sometimes gnats are bad during summer time because the winter was mild. Other reasons could be you are near a body of water, even a stream will attract the gnats.
Near the North Pole and on top of mountains. Even in the summer, the region near the North Pole in Canada and Alaska, and on the tallest mountains, it still is somewhat cold in the summer.