To cause an increase in temperature of (an object or space); to cause to become hot (often with "up").
To excite ardour in; to rouse to action; to excite to excess; to inflame, as the passions.
To arouse, to excite (sexually).
To become hotter.
To excite or make hot by action or emotion; to make feverish.
A condition where a mammal is aroused sexually or where it is especially fertile and therefore eager to mate; oestrus.
A hot spell.
The output of a heating system.
An attribute of a spice that causes a burning sensation in the mouth.
One cycle of bringing metal to maximum temperature and working it until it is too cool to work further.
The condition or quality of being hot.
Heating system; a system that raises the temperature of a room or building.
A period of intensity, particularly of emotion.
A fastball.
An undesirable amount of attention.
A preliminary race, used to determine the participants in a final race
A violent action unintermitted; a single effort.
A stage in a competition, not necessarily a sporting one; a round.
In omegaverse fiction, a cyclical period in which omegas experience an intense, sometimes irresistible biological urge to mate.
One or more firearms.
Thermal energy.
The police.
To make icy; to freeze.
To become ice; to freeze.
To cover with icing (frosting made of sugar and milk or white of egg); to frost; as cakes, tarts, etc.
To put out a team for a match.
To shoot the puck the length of the playing surface, causing a stoppage in play called icing.
To murder.
To cool with ice, as a beverage.
Water in frozen (solid) form.
An artifact that has been smuggled, especially one that is either clear or shiny.
A frozen dessert made of fruit juice, water and sugar.
One or more diamonds and jewelry, especially blood diamonds.
Any substance having the appearance of ice.
Money paid as a bribe.
The area where a game of ice hockey is played.
Elephant or rhinoceros ivory that has been poached and sold on the black market.
Any frozen volatile chemical, such as ammonia or carbon dioxide.
Any volatile chemical, such as water, ammonia, or carbon dioxide, not necessarily in solid form, when discussing the composition of e.g. a planet as an ice giant vs a gas giant.
Crystal form of amphetamine-based drugs.