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Answers Contain "Ice"

Can you guess these answers that all contain the word "ice"?
Quiz by Quizmaster
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Last updated: January 20, 2020
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First submittedDecember 21, 2011
Times taken70,351
Average score60.0%
Rating4.06
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Clue
Answer
Reykjavík is its capital
Iceland
You scream, I scream, we all
scream for this
Ice Cream
Enemy of the Titanic
Iceberg
Rapper who starred in "Friday"
Ice Cube
Time of the wooly mammoths
Ice Age
Polar ice covering
Ice Cap
"Basic Instinct" murder weapon
Ice Pick
Frozen carbon dioxide
Dry Ice
Gretzky's sport
Ice Hockey
Nancy Kerrigan's footwear
Ice Skates
Ship that cuts through sea ice
Icebreaker
Clue
Answer
British term for popsicle
Ice Lolly
Viral 2014 "challenge" to raise
money for ALS disease
Ice Bucket
Predecessor to the refrigerator
Ice Box
Hawaiian snow cone
Shave Ice
Mountaineer's tool
Ice Axe
Thick level of floating sea ice;
The largest is named after James Ross
Ice Shelf
Building built by Elsa in "Frozen"
Ice Palace
Term for the massive glaciers that cover
Greenland and Antarctica
Ice Sheet
White rapper briefly popular
around 1990
Vanilla Ice
+3
Level 75
Jul 11, 2014
Here the shaved ice is called Tropical Ice.
+5
Level 89
Oct 30, 2014
Where is here to you? In Hawaii, it is most definitely called shave ice. And without a "d" on the end.
+3
Level 75
Jan 11, 2015
I'm in the Upper South. I think Tropical Ice must be a brand name. I've also seen trucks selling "Hawaiian Shaved Ice", with the "d".
+2
Level 78
Sep 9, 2014
Could you consider adding Iceman from the X-Men?
+3
Level 68
Jan 9, 2017
Iceman is a famous All Black. Michael Jones of course.
+3
Level 91
Jan 21, 2020
Iceman was Maverick's rival, played by Val Kilmer.
+2
Level 82
Jan 11, 2015
Don't think I've ever heard of the three I missed before so don't feel too bad. Iced lolly I got.. had an Egyptian-British girl spend the weekend with me in Dammam and I remember her whining about wanting one. Thought it sounded so ridiculous.
+10
Level 69
Jan 11, 2015
Popsicles sound ridiculous to us Brits:P
+5
Level 26
Sep 3, 2016
Ice lolly sounds silly to me. I actually laughed out loud when I saw that answer.
+8
Level 82
Oct 22, 2017
It's a lolly made of ice....
+8
Level 77
Nov 2, 2018
Yes, it's the "lolly" part that sounds funny to American ears.
+4
Level 82
May 23, 2019
the term itself sounds ridiculous, but hearing her whine repeatedly in that accent "Ryyyann. I want an iced lolly!" made it much worse
+4
Level 71
May 23, 2019
It is short for LOLLYPOP
+2
Level 30
Jan 22, 2020
Lol... I have to say that as a brit 'lolly' sounds weird. Still prefer it to popsicle, tho.

(I'm also called 'lilipop' XD)

+2
Level 21
Jun 23, 2020
Here in Australia we call them ice blocks, I've honestly never even heard the word ice lolly up until today.
+1
Level 18
Feb 26, 2021
ice blocks?
+1
Level 68
Jan 9, 2017
The best popsicle flavour ever was Blurple - lemonade with blackcurrant swirls. I remember eating Blurples at lunchtime at school in summer in the 1980s. We would return to class with purple mouths.
+1
Level 61
Sep 16, 2020
As ridiculous as it may sound to other peoples, Ice-lolly is the English word for flavoured ice on a stick. And as English happens to be a language from England, that undeniable fact allows them the right to call flavoured ice on a stick whatever they choose. They chose Ice-lolly, and therefore, it is the correct English word. Thank you.
+8
Level 83
Jul 28, 2021
Dude, calm down
+6
Level 67
Nov 6, 2021
This is the worst timeline.
+3
Level 82
Jul 16, 2022
You certainly have the right to be as ridiculous as you choose but that doesn't make you correct. If I was born on the same patch of land as someone else who hundreds or thousands of years ago invented something that doesn't make me an expert or authority on that thing by birthright.
+1
Level 57
Mar 24, 2021
Both ice lolly and popsicle are ridiculous words.
+2
Level 26
Sep 3, 2016
No Ice Tea?
+4
Level 95
Jul 12, 2017
That would be iceD tea (or Ice T, if you mean the rapper)
+2
Level 82
Jan 21, 2020
Both are fine now: https://public.oed.com/updates/new-words-list-december-2012/
+3
Level 60
Nov 6, 2021
why are there so many rappers with ice?
+1
Level 64
Sep 5, 2016
7%? So it goes.
+15
Level 95
Jul 12, 2017
As a Canadian, I cringe every time I see Ice Hockey. It's hockey. When played on other surfaces, you name it (i.e. road hockey/street hockey/field hockey). You don't say "horse polo" or "field golf."

Sorry, I'll go back to my maple syrup now.

+17
Level 71
Sep 29, 2017
I think you'll find Hockey (played on grass) was going long before Ice Hockey. It has written history going back several hundred years and certainly long before Canada was Canada. The rules were only finalised though a short time before the Ice Hockey rules were codified. Field hockey is, in fact, the second largest team sport in the world (after soccer) played in over 100 countries, whereas Ice Hockey, apart from the Big 7 nations, there are another 30+ affiliated, but some of these don't even have an ice-rink.
+4
Level 82
Jan 21, 2020
It really depends on the country, which sport is more popular and called just "hockey". But overall you're right, field hockey is for climate and financial reasons much more popular worldwide. Even the International Ice Hockey Federation includes ice in its name.
+5
Level 69
Jan 21, 2020
Sorry Pants, but in international sporting parlance (check, for instance, the list of Olympic sports), just “hockey” means field hockey, but ice hockey needs the “ice” in front of it. But don’t go and get all righteously indignant about Canadian sports until you can come up with a valid defense of curling! :-D
+2
Level 59
Jan 22, 2020
Curling requires no defence. Just really, really long cold winters.
+2
Level 59
Jun 20, 2020
Curling is not just Canadian. Very competitive world wide and seriously played in Scotland.
+1
Level 85
Jun 23, 2020
Chess on ice
+1
Level 47
Jan 23, 2020
But the Americans do say Horseback riding....
+1
Level 65
Jul 31, 2023
Times change. Now they have "Brick and Mortar" stores. Roller Hockey, Ice Hockey, etc
+1
Level 70
Sep 29, 2017
Ice is nice.
+1
Level 89
Apr 3, 2019
This is like kids fighting over popsicles.
+4
Level 30
Apr 12, 2019
I've always heard icebreakers called ice cutters so I think that should be included as I have always heard by friends and family call it that.
+2
Level 70
Jan 20, 2020
I've heard (and used) both. Might be a Great Lakes thing.
+1
Level 89
Jan 21, 2020
If you're referring to coast guard ice cutters, cutters are a type of boat aside from any use for ice breaking. Mind that coast guard cutters aren't even remotely actual cutters; they just retained the name out of habit.
+4
Level 72
Jan 22, 2020
Nancy Kerrigan's footwear makes no sense to me. Cast doesn't have the word "ice" in it.

Too soon?

+11
Level 67
Jan 22, 2020
Perhaps also accept castle instead of palace? (Cue the comments about the difference between a palace and a castle..)
+2
Level 43
Jan 22, 2020
No, because Elsa likes the word palace
+2
Level 43
Jan 22, 2020
I've heard Brits say Ice Pop before
+4
Level 67
May 26, 2020
In the UK an ice lolly is on a stick, whereas an ice pop is usually a stick of flavoured ice in a sealed plastic wrapper.
+1
Level 81
May 7, 2022
Ohhh, so: a Freezie! Gotcha'. 😇
+1
Level 57
Oct 6, 2023
freeze pop. Gotcha
+1
Level 67
Nov 15, 2021
I was thinking this too
+2
Level 77
Jan 22, 2020
I'd like to "ax" you if you'll please accept "ax" in lieu of "axe". Thanks.
+1
Level 45
Jan 22, 2020
Any chance of accepting loli for lolly?
+1
Level 59
Jun 20, 2020
The question is specifically British and lolly is how it is spelled here and never loli.
+5
Level 77
Jan 22, 2020
Would you consider Ice Castle for Ice Palace?
+2
Level 79
Jan 22, 2020
We call them Icy Poles in Australia. Anything else sounds ridiculous to me.
+1
Level 47
Jan 23, 2020
Ice Block is much more common
+2
Level 69
Jan 24, 2020
Lived across much of Eastern Australia most of my life and have seldom heard Block - Pole is MUCH more common.
+1
Level 67
May 13, 2020
Only 31 for shave ice wow i thought everyone loves that stuff
+3
Level 75
Feb 28, 2021
Only got it because I took the Hawaii quiz the day before.

It's called 'cremolada' in Peru, doesn't mean we don't like it...

+2
Level 67
Jun 4, 2021
Interesting
+1
Level 67
May 13, 2020
How did I get ice lolly lol
+2
Level 44
Jan 10, 2021
Can you add ice castle as an answer for the Frozen question? I've seen Frozen a million times and when it wouldn't accept my answer, I was really confused as to what it could possibly be.
+1
Level 35
Mar 20, 2024
+1
+1
Level 40
Feb 26, 2021
Some of these are hard!
+1
Level 75
Feb 26, 2021
Isn't an 'ice floe' the same as an 'ice shelf?' I tried it, it didn't work, and I couldn't think of another term. I have heard of shelf though, should've got it.
+1
Level 64
Oct 5, 2021
I tried floe as well. The definition in my Oxford dictionary: Floe (also ice floe): a sheet of floating ice
+2
Level 67
Jun 4, 2021
Can castle be accepted for palace
+2
Level 67
Sep 7, 2021
I second this
+4
Level 60
Nov 6, 2021
Anyone else get “pick” for Mountaineer's tool?
+3
Level 68
Nov 6, 2021
Can "castle" also be accepted for "palace"?
+3
Level 28
Apr 6, 2022
Please accept "castle" for "Palace"
+1
Level 66
Mar 28, 2024
For the mountaineer's tool, please also accept ice screw. It's just as integral a part of the equipment as an ice axe is.