"too room-temperature"

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lolipop90

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Mar 18, 2014
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Hello,

I wanted to know if I can turn the phrase 'room temperature' into an adjective to make the following phrase: Sue couldn't enjoy the drink, no matter how expensive Huge said it'd been. It was way too room-temperature for her taste and she winced, thinking back to home and how a cool Oklahoma beer would beat the high-class, colorfully fashionable concoction any day.

If it's not possible, how could I rephrase it to express the same idea?

I appreciate your help!
 
How about "It was nowhere near cold enough?"
Also, I suspect you mean Hugh.
 
Indeed, I meant Hugh! I think that may work, yes, thank you:)
 
You can't really be "too" room temperature. Room temperature is not an extreme.
 
You can write too warm. This will contrast with the cool temperature that Sue prefers.

If you were writing about a hot drink, you'd write too cool​ for the same reason.
 
Note that I wrote warm and cool in my examples, not hot and cold. The reader will mentally set a scale where warm and cool are intermediate temperatures appropriate for the kind of thing you're writing about. A warm winter's day in my region might be in the forties or fifties Fahrenheit (roughly five to fifteen Celsius), but a warm summer day would be somewhere around eighty (27 C). A cool winter day would be moderately cold, say thirty to forty (-1 to 5 C); a cool summer night might get down to sixty (15 C).
 
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Thank you so much! That's such great advice!
 
I have to say that it sounds OK to me, but some English beers are served at room temperature and I dislike them. Beer should be very cold for me, so I get the issue.
 
British pubs serve draught beer at cellar temperature: 50-55 degrees F/10-12.7 C.
 
It doesn't make it taste any better to me. <lagerman>
 
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