Warm over Meaning in English
expression
ˈwɔɹm/ /ˈoʊvɝ
WAWRM OH-ver
wˈɔːm/ /ˈəʊvɐ
WAWM OH-vuh
Definition
To heat food that was already cooked before. Informally, it also means to repeat ideas or stories without making any real changes or improvements.
Usage & Nuances
'Warm over' is neutral for food, but slightly negative when used for ideas, stories, or topics, implying a lack of originality or freshness. Collocations: 'warm over leftovers,' 'warm over an old idea.' More common in American English.
Spanish: recalentar - repetir (sin innovar)Portuguese (BR): esquentar de novo - repetir (algo sem novidade)Portuguese (PT): aquecer novamente - reciclar (ideia)Chinese (Simplified): 重新加热 - 老调重弹Chinese (Traditional): 重新加熱 - 老調重彈Hindi: फिर से गर्म करना - दोहराना (बिना बदलाव के)Arabic: إعادة تسخين - إعادة طرح (دون تجديد)Bengali: পুনরায় গরম করা - পুরোনো বিষয় আবার তোলাRussian: разогреть - повторить (без изменений)Japanese: 温め直す - 使い古しを繰り返すVietnamese: hâm lại - lặp lại ý cũKorean: 다시 데우다 - 예전 것을 그대로 사용하다Turkish: yeniden ısıtmak - eski bir fikri tekrarlamakUrdu: دوبارہ گرم کرنا - پرانی بات دہراناIndonesian: memanaskan ulang - mengulang ide lama
Example Sentences
You can warm over the soup for lunch.
basic
Please don't warm over old arguments.
basic
She likes to warm over pizza from last night.
basic
That movie just warmed over all the old superhero clichés.
natural
Don’t just warm over your last year’s project—try something new.
natural
We just warmed over leftovers for dinner tonight.
natural