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pirecles
what's the difference between : I got a cold/ I got cold?
Jan 28, 2012 6:06 PM
Answers · 3
4
GET (A) COLD = CATCH A COLD = become ill (infected) with a cold
an acute viral infection of the upper respiratory passages characterized by discharge of watery mucus from the nose, sneezing, etc
e.g. Let's dry our hair so we don't get a cold.
Most of them caught colds and began to cough; one man of the draft was taken to hospital with pleurisy.
GET COLD
1) a condition of low temperature:
e. g. your dinner's getting cold;
the nights are getting colder.
2) feeling no warmth; uncomfortably chilled
e.g. I get cold a lot so I always carry a jacket with me.
They were cold, but there wasn't anything warm to put on.
see also this link: http://forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=724722
January 28, 2012
2
Craig from Newcastle got the meanings of "cold" right but a cold is when you are sick and "I got cold" is the simple past of an experience of low temperature. If you got a cold then you got sick. If you got cold it means you experienced uncomfortable or painfully low temperatures.
January 28, 2012
I wouldn't say "I got cold".
I would guess that, "I got cold" is just poor English.
"Cold" can mean temperature or a disease.
(the medical term is influenza, but when you become too cold or wet, you catch influenza, so English people say "I got a cold" and actually to be very thorough, influenza (flu) is a worse disease than a normal little cold.)
I want to put my coat on because I am (I have become - I was - etc) COLD
I have caught A cold because I didn't wear my coat.
I hope that helps.
January 28, 2012
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pirecles
Language Skills
English, French
Learning Language
English
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