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The phrase "a week from ice" is not correct and does not convey a clear meaning in written English.
It may be intended to express a time frame related to ice, but without context, it is ambiguous and confusing.
Example: "The event is scheduled for a week from ice, but I need clarification on what that means."
Alternatives: "a week from now" or "in a week".
Exact(1)
Nor is the implication that we make £1m ($1.6m) a week from ice cream.
Similar(59)
Six ponds in Storflaket and nine ponds in Stordalen were sampled twice a week from the end of June until ice cover in early October.
If I were to buy five $.05 dip-top ice cream cones a week from Tastee-Freeze, no money left.
A week from now?
I start production a week from Monday.
A week from Thursday?
I earned, I think $4.00 a week delivering ice.
None of them have jobs apart from a daughter who works four hours a week at an ice cream parlour.
He spends $120 a week on extra ice and $96 a week to get the garbage out.
As a dominant player, Stuart claims to be fielding calls each week from "little-bitty" ice companies looking for a buyer.
She died a week later from septicaemia.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com