Englishfor English speakers
ice
Noun
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A gas or liquid, normally water, which has been frozen (made solid)
When water is cooled below 0°C, it freezes into ice.
Ice is the solid state of water.
ice
Verb
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If you ice something, you cool it by putting ice or something else very cold on it.
I iced my knee after I hurt it in soccer.
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If you ice a cake, you cover with icing.
I iced this cake.
cream
Noun
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Cream is the fatty part of milk.
Would you like some cream in your coffee?
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The cream of something is only the best thing, or person.
He's the cream of the tennis world.
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Cream is a soft white colour
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A cream is a smooth oily substance that people put on their skin to make it soft or as a medicine.
You should clean the cut and put this cream on it three times a day.
cream
Verb
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To cream something is to puree or blend it into a liquid.
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To cream something is to make it turn into a cream-like color.
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To win easily or by a large amount.
The final score was 11-2, we creamed them!
bomb
Noun
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A bomb is a weapon that explodes.
On August 6, a U.S. B-29 dropped a 9,000-pound atomic bomb on Hiroshima.
One U.S. soldier and two Iraqi children were killed when a roadside bomb exploded in central Baghdad.
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If something, often a movie or a concert, was a bomb, it was very unsuccessful.
The first computer was a bomb, but IBM improved it and the new machine sold very well.
bomb
Verb
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If you bomb a place, you drop or put one or more bombs there.
This woman's mother and son were killed when American planes bombed the village.
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If you bomb somewhere, you go there at high speed.
They walked up the mountain with their bikes and then bombed down as fast as they could go.
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If you bomb a test, course, etc., you get a very low grade on it.
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If something, often a movie or a concert, bombs, it is very unsuccessful.
The show bombed in London as well as flopping on Broadway.