heated - Master This Word
Master this word with our 5-step learning method – Learn English in English
Train English Through Brain Routes, Not Translation.
This page helps you stop memorizing isolated translations and start understanding a word through its shared mental image, native-style thinking, and practical training steps.
Master this word with our 5-step learning method – Learn English in English
Example sentences are the start of understanding. Don't rush to memorize. First feel how the word works in a sentence.
heat = 'high temperature'; Old English hǣtu → Proto-Germanic *haitho → Greek káidēsis (to burn). Imagine a pot of water boiling over, releasing steam and warmth, a perfect symbol of heat.
Note 1: These definitions and etymologies are not standard dictionary definitions, but extended explanations provided to help with memorization and understanding of the actual application of words. Through this background information, we strive to make words more vivid and easier to understand, and help you remember their meanings in real life.
Note 2: LexiTalk designs the learning flow around the linguistics principle of “Comprehensible Input.” When learners encounter material that is slightly above their level but still understandable from context, the brain naturally absorbs the language. That’s why we keep every word inside authentic contexts, using examples and associations to help you understand it and use it flexibly.
Read the FAQ explanation of Comprehensible InputBefore I act, I hover my palm above the pot and move the air toward the metal. I turn the knob and feel the heat rise, a warm urge that makes the water tremble. I adjust my stance, holding steady as the surface shifts from cool to bright. The rush teaches me when to let it stay low or push it higher, and I keep the pace until I'm ready to pull back.
Heat is a noun and a verb that covers both everyday warmth and scientific energy transfer. As a noun, heat can describe how hot something is or the warmth produced by a heater, sun, or stove. As a verb, heat means to raise something's temperature or to make someone excited or angry in informal usage. In physics, heat is energy that flows from higher to lower temperature objects. The word also appears in idioms such as heat up, heat wave, or in phrases like in the heat of the moment. Etymology traces to Old English hǣtu and Proto-Germanic *haitho, linking heat to burning imagery and high temperature. Learners often confuse heat with hot or misuse it in certain contexts.
Heat in English spans physical, energetic, and figurative uses; learners must separate heat as energy transfer from hot as a temperature state and from heated as emotion or debate.
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