See also: front, the (def. 3) sea-ice (def. 2)
- 1819  In the same spring, an unusual number of schooners and boats belonging to that bay were totally lost at the ice. . . .
- 1916  "He's young for the ice," Bill observed.
- 1961  Hedley Payne . . . who had wangled his very first berth to the ice, walked for two days to Gambo railway station to catch the sealers' car into the capital in time to sign on
1b n. leave home to engage in the seal hunt.
- 1964  Seal hunting is known to Newfoundlanders as "going to the ice," and they have taken to the floes every March for two centuries
2 n. Hockey the sheet of ice on which the game is played.