1. Give someone a surprise. In this usage, nouns or pronouns are always used between "catch" and "cold". The news that I received this promotion really made me feel cold - I do not think they are thinking seriously about me!
2. Surprise your opponent and gain an advantage. If we can protect their defense, we should be able to tie the game
Ill and cold. I do not like going to the doctor's clinic - I often get a cold after infecting all the bacteria!
Figure common cold (common respiratory infection) (more frequently used with capture.) Close the window, otherwise you will catch a cold. I have a cold every year.
Also, please be careful of the death of people (cold). When Jane catches a cold or puts on a hat whenever an important business trip, it suffers from a bad cold and infects with a cold virus. The first initial term (the 16th century) means the coldization due to being exposed to the cold and the current significance of the latter half of the 17th century. Normally, shortened hyperbolic deformations are updated slightly
One trick to maintaining health during the winter is not to "catch a cold". I thought that the cold is a kind of bug, but the cold is a cold virus. However, there are hundreds of different viruses that can cause "colds everywhere". If you have a cold and your immune system is not alert you will discover that you were receiving a virus that you accidently feel it is easy to reproduce in your nose, throat or lungs maybe. The virus actually does not exist and actually does not die. However, if the host 's immune system is in a precautionary state they can mutate and occasionally cause serious damage, so they can be considered to have some kind of awareness. The goal is not to let the virus capture your body and not "get sick".
• Glenn does not catch a cold if I = 2, even though Glenn is in contact with a patient with a cold and living near a corn field where pesticides are sprayed. If he does not live near the corn field to which the pesticide is sprayed, there will be no cold to come in contact; irrespective of whether I = 0, regardless of whether the pesticide lives near the corn field being sprayed. Causal relations are obvious: C = 1 and I = 0 or I = 1 and S = 1, CC = 1 This number is 70% of the population I = 2, 10% I = 1, and 20 Is 20, if Joe does not spray, Glenn's anticipated cold loss is $ 60, if he is not, it is $ 90. The difference of $ 30 is the economic cost of Gleneagle's painting (before you know whether Glen really catches a cold)