lukewarm, tepid, or not hot enough

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optimistic pessimist

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Hi all.

I took a lukewarm bath last night. That's why I caught a cold.
I took a tepid bath last night. That's why I caught a cold.
I took a bath that wasn't hot enough. That's why I caught a cold.

I know the opposite of hot is cold, but if I use it, it's different from what I want to say.
Among the three sentences which one is a common phrasing? Or is there another way to say this?

OP
 

Rover_KE

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None of those statements is common—you don't catch a cold by taking lukewarm/tepid baths.

There's not much to choose between lukewarm water and tepid water, but in real life I think most people commonly say 'The water wasn't hot enough'.
 
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GoesStation

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Of the three, tepid is far less common in American English. The other two ways of expressing temperature are common.
 
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