ice

ice — verb

1. to spread a layer of sweet icing over the surface of a cake or other baked goods

1.動詞及物B1
釋義

to spread a layer of sweet icing over the surface of a cake or other baked goods as decoration or flavouring

例句

Nila spent the whole morning icing the birthday cake for her son.

ice + noun phrase for decorating cakes

The baker iced the cupcakes and added tiny silver sugar balls on top.

ice + noun + additional decoration

同義詞
  • frost

    North American English term; 'frost a cake' is more common in US, while 'ice a cake' is common in UK

  • glaze

    uses thinner, more fluid icing that sets to a hard, shiny surface; less thick than icing

文法句型

ice + noun phrase (cake, cupcakes, cookies)

用法筆記

Frequently used with a type of icing as the object of 'with' (e.g. 'iced with chocolate ganache'). Also common in the passive form when describing a finished cake.

常見錯誤

I spread the cake with sugar cream
I iced the cake with buttercream.
💡'ice' is the standard verb covering cakes; verbs like 'spread' or 'cover' sound unnatural in baking contexts.

2. to kill a person, especially in a planned or sudden violent act (slang, original

2.動詞及物C1
釋義

to kill a person, especially in a planned or sudden violent act (slang, originally from criminal groups)

例句

The witness said the gang threatened to ice anyone who talked to the police.

ice + noun phrase — slang for killing

In the crime film, the hitman iced his target with a single shot.

同義詞
  • kill

    neutral, formal register; not restricted to humans; no criminal connotation required

  • murder

    formal legal term; implies unlawful, intentional killing

  • whack

    equally informal slang from Mafia contexts; slightly less common than 'ice'

文法句型

ice + noun phrase (someone)

用法筆記

This sense is strongly informal and associated with organised crime or gang contexts. Avoid in formal or news writing — use 'kill' or 'murder' instead.

常見錯誤

The hunter iced a deer for food.
The hunter killed a deer for food.
💡'ice' as slang for murder is only used for people, not animals, and implies criminal intent.

3. in American football, to deliberately make the opposing kicker wait before attem

3.動詞及物C2
釋義

in American football, to deliberately make the opposing kicker wait before attempting a field goal, usually by calling a timeout, so that the pause makes success less likely

例句

The coach called a timeout to ice the kicker before the final field goal.

ice + the kicker — American football tactic

The opposing team tried to ice the kicker by calling three timeouts in a row.

文法句型

ice + the kicker

用法筆記

Exclusive to American football. The verb takes 'kicker' as its direct object. Often occurs in the construction 'try to ice the kicker' as a deliberate team strategy.

常見錯誤

The goalkeeper iced the penalty taker.
The coach iced the kicker before the field goal attempt.
💡'ice' in this sense is specific to American football kickers, not soccer/football penalty takers.

4. the ice hockey violation that occurs when a player shoots the puck from their ow

4.動詞及物C2
釋義

the ice hockey violation that occurs when a player shoots the puck from their own half across the opponent's goal line without anyone touching it, stopping play and giving the other team a face-off in the offending zone

例句

The defenseman accidentally iced the puck while trying to clear the zone.

ice + the puck — ice hockey violation

The referee stopped play because the team had iced the puck from their side.

文法句型

ice + the puck

用法筆記

Always takes 'the puck' as the object. The rule is more complex in professional leagues — the penalty (face-off in the offending team's zone) may be waived if the puck goes into the net or if the team is shorthanded.

常見錯誤

The player iced the ball.
The player iced the puck.
💡in ice hockey the object is specifically 'puck,' not 'ball.'

5. to become partly or completely covered with ice; to change from liquid to solid

5.動詞不及物B2
釋義

to become partly or completely covered with ice; to change from liquid to solid ice as the temperature drops below freezing

例句

The windshield of Darius's truck iced over during the heavy snowstorm.

phrasal verb: ice over — become covered with ice

The small pond behind the school ices over every winter for ice skating.

同義詞
  • freeze over

    more general; 'freeze over' can apply to any liquid surface, while 'ice over' implies a visible layer of ice

  • freeze up

    can apply to both liquids and mechanisms; 'freeze up' often suggests malfunction

反義詞
  • thaw

    to melt and return to liquid state

  • melt

    to turn from solid ice back to liquid

文法句型

ice over

ice up

用法筆記

In British English, 'ice over' is more common for surfaces like roads or ponds; 'ice up' is preferred for mechanisms (locks, windscreens, aeroplane wings). Both patterns are intransitive — there is no direct object.

常見錯誤

I iced the pond over.
The pond iced over.
💡this sense is intransitive; you cannot ice something over, it ices over by itself.

6. to make a drink, food, or container cold by putting it with or on ice, or inside

6.動詞及物B1
釋義

to make a drink, food, or container cold by putting it with or on ice, or inside a refrigerator

例句

Please ice the bottles of soda before the guests arrive for the party.

transitive: ice + object for cooling

The bartender iced the tall glasses before pouring the cold beer into them.

同義詞
  • chill

    more general term; can use a refrigerator or ice; 'chill' does not specifically imply contact with ice

  • cool

    even more general; can mean reducing temperature by any method

反義詞
  • warm

    to raise the temperature

  • heat

    to raise the temperature significantly

文法句型

ice + noun phrase (drinks, food)

用法筆記

Distinguish from sense 1 (ICE CAKE) — this sense only lowers temperature; it does not involve spreading icing. The past participle 'iced' is common in commercial contexts ('iced coffee', 'iced tea', 'iced seafood').

常見錯誤

Ice the cake in the fridge' (when meaning 'chill the cake').
Chill the cake in the fridge' or 'Ice the cake with frosting.
💡'ice a cake' means add icing, not cool it; use 'chill' for lowering temperature.

ice — noun

ice — abbreviation

ice — noun suffix