List of Old English Words in the OED/IC

{|border="1" cellpadding=4 cellspacing=0 style="margin: 0 0 1em 1em; background:# f9f9f;| border: 1px #aaa solid; border-collapse: collapse; font-size: 95%;" 3. astronomy any volatile chemical, such as water, ammonia, or carbon dioxide, not necessarily in solid form. 4. frozen dessert made of fruit juice, water and sugar. 5. any substance having the appearance of ice. 6. slang one or more diamonds.7. slang, drugs, crystal form of methamphetamine. 8.ice hockey the area where a game of ice hockey is played.
 * Old English||sp||English.
 * Ice||n||Water in frozen (solid) form.  2. physics, astronomy, a frozen volatile chemical, such as ammonia or carbon dioxide.
 * Ice||n||Water in frozen (solid) form.  2. physics, astronomy, a frozen volatile chemical, such as ammonia or carbon dioxide.
 * Ice||n||Water in frozen (solid) form.  2. physics, astronomy, a frozen volatile chemical, such as ammonia or carbon dioxide.
 * Ice ||vb||To cool with ice, as a beverage. 2. to become ice, to cover with ice, to freeze, cool, chill; refrigerate. 3.(slang) to murder. 4. cover with icing (frosting made of sugar and milk or white of egg); to frost; as cakes, tarts, etc. 5. (ice hockey) to put out a team for a match. 6. (ice hockey) to shoot the puck the length of the playing surface, causing a stoppage in play called icing.
 * Ice ||phr||"Break the Ice" - lessen shyness by initiating conversation. 2. take the initiative in starting the discussion.
 * Ice ||phr||"Ice over"
 * Ice ||phr||"Ice up"
 * Ice ||phr||"Put Something on Ice" - postpone. 2. to put something aside for the time.
 * Ice ||phr||"Tread on Thin Ice" - take an unnecessary risk.
 * Ice-bolt ||n||A sudden deadly chill.
 * Ice-bone||n||The share bone, or another name of the pelvis or haunch
 * Ice-breaker ||n||A ship designed to break through ice, so that it, or other ships coming behind can navigate on  frozen seas.  2. a slush ship.  3. a game, activity, humourous anecdote, designed to relax a group of people to help them get to know each other.
 * Ice-chest ||n||A refrigerator.
 * Ice-drift ||n||Drift ice in a mass.
 * Ice-fall||n||Cataract of ice, a glacier
 * Ice-field ||n||A wide, flat expanse of ice.
 * Ice-flow ||n||An ice stream.
 * Ice-fox ||n||The arctic fox.
 * Ice-free||adj||free from obstruction or delay from ice
 * Ice-hill||n||A hill or mound of ice; an elevated glacier, a slope covered with ice; also a floating iceberg
 * Ice-house ||n||A structure, often underground, and with non-conducting walls, in which ice is stored for the year.
 * Iceland ||n||The name of a large island lying on the border of the Artcic between Norway and Greenland.
 * Ice-man ||n||A man who delivers ice. 2. a man skilled in traversing ice. 3. a man appointed to look after the ice at a skating rink.
 * Icemanship ||n||Ice-craft
 * Ice-plough ||n||An instrument used for cutting grooves in the ice, for the purpose of removing large blocks which are stored for summer use.
 * Ice-sheet ||n||A sheet or layer of ice covering an expanse tract of land; as e.g. during the ice-age.
 * Ice-ship ||n||On specially built to resist ice pressure. 2. an ice-breaker.
 * Ice-stream ||n||A stream of ice-floes carried in a particular course; esp. that which sweeps around Cape farewell in Greenland. 2. a glacier valley.
 * I-cheose||vb||To chase
 * I-cherre||vb||To return, turn, chare
 * Icicle||adj||A diminitive; consider: "Shinicle"
 * Ickle||adj||A hypercoristic form of "little", sometimes a childish use. 2. a small piece of ice; an icicle.
 * I-cunde||n||Nature, kind, inheritance, native-land, native.
 * I-cundeliche||adv||Naturally, inherently.
 * i-cusse||vb||To kiss mutually; i-kiss
 * Ice-hill||n||A hill or mound of ice; an elevated glacier, a slope covered with ice; also a floating iceberg
 * Ice-house ||n||A structure, often underground, and with non-conducting walls, in which ice is stored for the year.
 * Iceland ||n||The name of a large island lying on the border of the Artcic between Norway and Greenland.
 * Ice-man ||n||A man who delivers ice. 2. a man skilled in traversing ice. 3. a man appointed to look after the ice at a skating rink.
 * Icemanship ||n||Ice-craft
 * Ice-plough ||n||An instrument used for cutting grooves in the ice, for the purpose of removing large blocks which are stored for summer use.
 * Ice-sheet ||n||A sheet or layer of ice covering an expanse tract of land; as e.g. during the ice-age.
 * Ice-ship ||n||On specially built to resist ice pressure. 2. an ice-breaker.
 * Ice-stream ||n||A stream of ice-floes carried in a particular course; esp. that which sweeps around Cape farewell in Greenland. 2. a glacier valley.
 * I-cheose||vb||To chase
 * I-cherre||vb||To return, turn, chare
 * Icicle||adj||A diminitive; consider: "Shinicle"
 * Ickle||adj||A hypercoristic form of "little", sometimes a childish use. 2. a small piece of ice; an icicle.
 * I-cunde||n||Nature, kind, inheritance, native-land, native.
 * I-cundeliche||adv||Naturally, inherently.
 * i-cusse||vb||To kiss mutually; i-kiss
 * Ice-stream ||n||A stream of ice-floes carried in a particular course; esp. that which sweeps around Cape farewell in Greenland. 2. a glacier valley.
 * I-cheose||vb||To chase
 * I-cherre||vb||To return, turn, chare
 * Icicle||adj||A diminitive; consider: "Shinicle"
 * Ickle||adj||A hypercoristic form of "little", sometimes a childish use. 2. a small piece of ice; an icicle.
 * I-cunde||n||Nature, kind, inheritance, native-land, native.
 * I-cundeliche||adv||Naturally, inherently.
 * i-cusse||vb||To kiss mutually; i-kiss
 * Ickle||adj||A hypercoristic form of "little", sometimes a childish use. 2. a small piece of ice; an icicle.
 * I-cunde||n||Nature, kind, inheritance, native-land, native.
 * I-cundeliche||adv||Naturally, inherently.
 * i-cusse||vb||To kiss mutually; i-kiss
 * I-cundeliche||adv||Naturally, inherently.
 * i-cusse||vb||To kiss mutually; i-kiss
 * i-cusse||vb||To kiss mutually; i-kiss
 * i-cusse||vb||To kiss mutually; i-kiss