Idioms for ice
Origin of ice
before 900; 1905–10
for def 8a; Middle English, Old English
īs; cognate with German
Eis, Old Norse
īss
OTHER WORDS FROM ice
ice·less, adjective ice·like, adjective re·ice, verb, re·iced, re·ic·ing. un·ice, verb (used with object), un·iced, un·ic·ing.Words nearby ice
British Dictionary definitions for on thin ice (1 of 2)
ice
/ (aɪs) /
noun
verb
Derived forms of ice
iceless, adjective icelike, adjectiveWord Origin for ice
Old English
īs; compare Old High German
īs, Old Norse
īss
British Dictionary definitions for on thin ice (2 of 2)
ICE
abbreviation for (in Britain)
Institution of Civil Engineers
Scientific definitions for on thin ice
ice
[ īs ]
A solid consisting of frozen water. Ice forms at or below a temperature of 0°C (32°F). Ice expands during the process of freezing, with the result that its density is lower than that of water.
A solid form of a substance, especially of a substance that is a liquid or a gas at room temperature at sea level on Earth. The nuclei of many comets contain methane ice.
Idioms and Phrases with on thin ice (1 of 2)
on thin ice
In a precarious or risky position, as in After failing the midterm, he was on thin ice with his math teacher. This metaphor is often rounded out as skate on thin ice, as in He knew he was skating on thin ice when he took his rent money with him to the racetrack. This idiom, which alludes to the danger that treading on thin ice will cause it to break, was first used figuratively by Ralph Waldo Emerson in his essay Prudence (1841): “In skating over thin ice our safety is in our speed.”
Idioms and Phrases with on thin ice (2 of 2)
ice
see break the ice; cut no ice; on ice; on thin ice; put on ice; tip of the iceberg.