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Discover LudwigThe phrase "chip of ice" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe a small piece or fragment of ice, often in a literal or metaphorical context.
Example: "He picked up a chip of ice from the ground and tossed it into the nearby stream."
Alternatives: "piece of ice" or "fragment of ice."
Exact(20)
In other words, a chip of ice.
"My chip of ice is a bit… slushy".
Graham Greene said that all writers have a "chip of ice" in their hearts.
Haworth-Booth added: "She had a chip of ice in her heart.
"Jeremy has a chip of ice in him," says a friend.
Graham Greene once said that writers should keep a chip of ice in their hearts.
Similar(40)
She pitches herself into the wide gray Meuse, where she floats face down among chips of ice.
FLYING chips of ice sparkled in the July sun as I hammered a pick into the 1,200-foot-high 1,200-foot-high 1,200-foot-highe Dana Couloir in Yosheete Natiofal Park.
I tried to dig with my heels, as Chris suggested, only to clip off little chips of ice that flew up into my eyes.
By the time I had a brooding, barrel-aged Sazerac in my hand, it was shrinking faster than the chips of ice on the cocktail's surface.
But sipped slowly, through chips of ice, the sweetened condensed milk gives ca phe sua da a mellow, caramel flavor, and makes it a wonderfully cooling drink on a summer afternoon.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com