释义 |
[ ahys-free, -free ] / ˈaɪsˈfri, -ˌfri /
adjectivefree of ice. (of a harbor or other body of water) free at all times of the year of any ice that would impede navigation. Origin of ice-freeFirst recorded in 1890–95; ice + -free Words nearby ice-freeice fishing, ice floe, ice flowers, ice fog, ice foot, ice-free, ice front, ice giant, ice hockey, icehouse, ice island Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for ice-freeThat would have meant a fully re-vegetated (that is, lush with elk food) ice-free corridor. Incontrovertible Evidence Proves the First Americans Came From Asia|Doug Peacock|March 27, 2014|DAILY BEAST New research suggests the Arctic Ocean could be ice-free by 2015, with devastating consequences for the world. The End of the Arctic? Ocean Could be Ice Free by 2015|Mark Hertsgaard|December 13, 2013|DAILY BEAST In just a few decades, the same ship may be able to sail all the way to an ice-free North Pole. Shocking Climate-Change Photos|Ban Ki-moon|October 13, 2009|DAILY BEAST The great Slav Empire covets an ice-free harbour in Norway, and until this war broke out was busily engaged in compassing its end. England and Germany|Emile Joseph Dillon
Nor did it equal early spring, when trout streams were ice-free and the earth still too wet for plowing. The Duck-footed Hound|James Arthur Kjelgaard The autumn would force the British fleet to leave for ice-free waters. The Winning of Canada: A Chronicle of Wolf|William Wood But soon a dark, ice-free cape peeped out of the mist in the north-east. The Voyage of the Vega round Asia and Europe, Volume I and Volume II|A.E. Nordenskieold Some of these Alpine lakes were ice-free for fewer than thirty days out of the whole year. Rescue Dog of the High Pass|James Arthur Kjelgaard
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