The word is spelled icy, just as you spelled it.
He slid on the icy sidewalk and nearly fell.
The independent penguin refused to waddle in a straight line and instead moonwalked across the icy terrain.
"Get icy" in French is "devenir glacial".
The icy wind seemed to subtly indicate a shift in the weather.
No. The adjective icy sounds like the letters I-C , with a long I and long E sound.
The vowel "I" at the beginning of a word is usually pronounced as a "long vowel" ("eye") when it is immediately followed by another vowel (e.g. ion, iambic), or begins with the Greek prefix "iso" (eye-so). In nearly every other case, the vowel "I" is a "short vowel" ("ih") when preceding a consonant (e.g. inner, imagine). Exceptions are"ichor", "irate", and three-letter words ending with "e" or "y" (ire, icy).
Actually, the word "icy" is an adjective.
Icy is an adjective.
The word is spelled icy, just as you spelled it.
The word for icy is helado/helada.
No, icy is an adjective, as it adds information to a noun, eg: the icy road, or the icy pond. The noun form is iciness or ice
no icy is not a synonym or an antonym Well it depends on what word you are using. If the word was warm, it would be an antonym. If the word was freezing, then it would be a synonym. Icy would be an adjective all by itself.
Παγωμένος [pagomEnos]
icicle
Ice.
icy