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igloo

[ ig-loo ]

noun

, plural ig·loos.
  1. an Inuit house, being a dome-shaped hut usually built of blocks of hard snow.
  2. Informal. any dome-shaped construction thought to resemble an igloo:

    immense silos topped with steel igloos.

  3. Military. a dome-shaped building for the storage of rockets or other munitions.
  4. an excavation made by a seal in the snow over its breathing hole in the ice.


igloo

/ ˈɪɡluː /

noun

  1. a dome-shaped Inuit house, usually built of blocks of solid snow
  2. a hollow made by a seal in the snow over its breathing hole in the ice
“Collins English Dictionary — Complete & Unabridged” 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012


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Word History and Origins

Origin of igloo1

First recorded in 1855–60, igloo is from the Inuit word iglu “house”
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Word History and Origins

Origin of igloo1

C19: from Inuktitut igdlu house
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Example Sentences

Once snug inside the igloos, diners and game-players have four separate menus to order from.

Someone is also going to have to enter each igloo to clean it between seatings.

Like other snow shelters, the igloo works best if it includes a cold well, a door, ventilation holes, and a sleeping platform.

A quinzheeThe quinzhee is a dome-shaped snow shelter, similar in shape to an igloo, but much easier to construct.

In addition, heated steel covers help keep hot dishes hot on their journey from kitchen to yurt or igloo, as do electric warmers atop delivery trays.

The set, cleared of chew toys, now housed a plastic igloo, several blocks of ice, pompoms and smelled strongly of herring.

In their cheerleader personas, the penguins took over the stadium, entering through the igloo.

Walter Mondale emerged from his Twin Cities igloo to stump for reform.

Whereupon they fell to heh-hehing afresh with cries of "Igloo, igloo!"

From the 25th to the 29th, Kennedy, Harrisson and Jones were employed building an igloo to be used as a magnetic observatory.

On the afternoon of the 30th, the magnetician invited every one to a tea-party in the igloo to celebrate the opening.

The outside temperature was -33 degrees F. and it was not much higher inside the igloo.

An igloo was built as a shelter for those sinking the geological shaft, and seal-hunting was a daily recreation.

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