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icebreaker
/ ˈaɪsˌbreɪkə /
noun
- Also callediceboat a vessel with a reinforced bow for breaking up the ice in bodies of water to keep channels open for navigation
- any tool or device for breaking ice into smaller pieces
- something intended to relieve mutual shyness at a gathering of strangers
Word History and Origins
Origin of icebreaker1
Example Sentences
Luke’s dinner, however, was not nearly as conducive to the icebreaker.
During other months, less effort is needed by icebreakers to sustain transportation.
In one of my classes, they focused on fostering connections, with group chats and icebreakers to get to know each other.
At the event, Katie set out notebooks, pens and Starbursts for an icebreaker activity at every desk.
I spent a lot of time on icebreakers in February 1987 looking for life in the ocean below the Ross Ice Shelf, which is almost 200,000 square miles, about the size of France, and more than 2,000 feet thick.
It functions as an icebreaker the same way trust-fall exercises do.
This could replace the ice cream social as the college freshman icebreaker of choice.
“I thought, ‘What could I do that would immediately try to be an icebreaker with the audience,’” Colbert says.
As I was anxious to have the experience of smashing through the ice on an icebreaker, I went aboard the Corwin.
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