What is another word for air-conditioned?

Pronunciation: [ˈe͡əkəndˈɪʃənd] (IPA)

Air-conditioned is a term commonly used to describe an environment with regulated temperature and humidity levels. However, there are several other synonyms that can be used to convey the same meaning. Some of these include cooled, chilled, ventilated, climate-controlled, temperature-controlled, refrigerated, and conditioned. Other possible synonyms for air-conditioned are AC, cool, and fresh, although these may be used in more casual or colloquial contexts. Whatever the case may be, all these words connote a comfortable and refreshing atmosphere, especially during hot summer days or in enclosed spaces with little natural ventilation.

Synonyms for Air-conditioned:

What are the paraphrases for Air-conditioned?

Paraphrases are restatements of text or speech using different words and phrasing to convey the same meaning.
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  • Other Related

    • Adjective
      air-conditioning.
    • Proper noun, singular
      air-conditioning.

What are the hypernyms for Air-conditioned?

A hypernym is a word with a broad meaning that encompasses more specific words called hyponyms.
  • Other hypernyms:

    artificially cooled (adj), chilled (adj), conditioned (adj), cooled (adj), refrigerated (adj), temperature-controlled (adj), ventilated (adj).

What are the opposite words for air-conditioned?

The antonyms of the word "air-conditioned" are various words that refer to a lack of air conditioning. Some possible antonyms include "non-air-conditioned," "uncooled," "unconditioned," "heated," "sweaty," and "muggy." While air conditioning has become a common feature in many buildings, especially in warmer climates, it was not always so. Historically, people relied on natural methods of cooling, such as shade, breezes, and water evaporation. Some still choose to avoid air conditioning for environmental or financial reasons. However, in many situations, air conditioning can provide important comfort and health benefits, helping to reduce the risk of heat stroke and other heat-related illnesses. As such, it remains a popular choice for many individuals and businesses.

What are the antonyms for Air-conditioned?

Famous quotes with Air-conditioned

  • I've done made a deal with the devil. He said he's going to give me an air-conditioned place when I go down there, if I go there, so I won't put all the fires out.
    Red Adair
  • Nobody doubts that the Russians committed aggression, that Saddam Hussein committed aggression. We attribute to them rational goals, maybe they wanted to control the energy of the Middle East or something. With regard to ourselves, it's impossible... We just cannot adopt towards ourselves the same sane attitudes that we adopt easily, in fact reflexively, when others commit crimes... And if anyone says it, educated people, liberal intellectuals, are infuriated. Because it suggests that we could do something that's not noble. We can make mistakes, that's easy. You can criticize mistakes. You can criticize low-level crimes, like Abu-Ghraib, you can criticize that. You can criticize My Lai. But not the educated, civilized people, the kind of people we have dinner with, see at concerts, sitting in air-conditioned offices planning mass-murder. So that's beyond criticism. On the other hand, if it's half-crazed G.I.s in the field, uneducated, don't know who's going to shoot at them next, you can blame them, you can say how awful they are. You can criticize Lynndie England, disadvantaged young woman, very different from us. But how about the guys who organized and planned it? No.
    Noam Chomsky
  • It is all very well for intellectuals in their air-conditioned offices to bemoan the unbelievable impact of either mean-spirited or silly rumours in the genesis of communal riots among the common folk. But in this instance, in their own reports on and analysis of communal violence, factual data were just as shamelessly replaced with invention, rumours and conspiracy theories. In this respect, religious extremists such as the Shahi Imam have behaved themselves better than the secularist campaigners who pose as the guardians of modernity and the scientific temper. Arundhati Roy risked the international fame she so clearly cherishes by going public with blatant lies about atrocities against named Gujarati Muslim women who turned out to be either non-existent or abroad at the time of the riots. Perhaps a fiction writer can afford this, but the news media with their deontology of accuracy and objectivity made themselves guilty of similar howlers. Internationally influential media like the Washington Post copied from an Islamist website rumours about Hindu provocations behind the Godhra carnage, falsely claiming a Gujarati journalist as source, and never publishing a correction when the journalist in question denied ever having put out such a story. With such media, who needs rumors?
    Koenraad Elst
  • I returned to the Holiday Inn — where they have a swimming pool and air-conditioned rooms — to consider the paradox of a nation that has given so much to those who preach the glories of rugged individualism from the security of countless corporate sinecures, and so little to that diminishing band of yesterday's refugees who still practice it, day by day, in a tough, rootless and sometimes witless style that most of us have long since been weaned away from.
    Hunter S. Thompson
  • It began to worry me that I could never possibly settle in England now, not after Tokyo nude-shows and sliced green chillies, brown children sluicing at the road-pump, the air-conditioned hum in bedrooms big as ballrooms, negligible income-tax, curry tiffins, being the big man in the big car, the bars of all the airports of Africa and the East.
    Anthony Burgess

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