Because of location, water stream temperature and hemisphere facts. Anyway if you mean because "Iceland" is called -ice-landt, here is a litta storie: "There was a man by the name Flóki Vilgerðarson. He was a great Viking. He left to find Garðarshólmur" -- Landnámabók The second Norseman to arrive in Iceland was named Flóki Vilgerðarson, but the precise year of his arrival is not clear. According to the story told in Landnámabók, he took three ravens to help him find his way. Thus, he was nicknamed Raven-Floki (Icelandic: Hrafna-Flóki). Flóki set his ravens free near the Faroe Islands. The first raven flew back on board. The second flew up in the air and then returned to the ship. However, the third flew in front of the ship and they followed its direction to Iceland. He landed in Vatnsfjörður in the Westfjords after passing what is now Reykjavík. One of his men, Faxi, remarked that they seemed to have found great land -- the bay facing Reykjavík is therefore known as Faxaflói. A harsh winter caused all of Flóki's cattle to die -- he cursed this cold country, and when he spotted a drift ice in the fjord he decided to name it "Ísland" (Iceland). Despite difficulties in finding food, he and his men stayed another year, this time in Borgarfjörður, but they finally headed back to Norway the following summer. Flóki would return much later and settle in what is now known as Flókadalur. Sorry for the vast length of pre-reading before the actual fact. Is for building up tension.
icy iceland
Iceland is an area that is not as it sounds, icy. It really isn't most people say the ground is green, meaning you can see land. And Greenland is the opposite,icy.
Iceland. Because it is just a joke calling it iceland, tho Greenland is really the icy part lol.
Greenland is misnomer. Is is very cold and icy. Where as iceland can be warmer and can become quite green.
Iceland, despite its name, is not very icy. Greenland and Iceland should swap names. So people in Iceland, live in houses, like most other parts of the world. In the winter it snows a lot but the schools dont close.
same drinks you drink, water, milk, sodas, alcohol (depends on age)
well i remember that my fifth grade teacher told me that iceland is not icy but greenland is so i can only imagind beautiful snowy hills and valleys
Actually, the word "icy" is an adjective.
Iceland sits on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, where the North American and Eurasian tectonic plates meet. This creates a hotspot for volcanic activity. The heat generated by the Earth's mantle beneath the region melts the ice, leading to volcanic eruptions.
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
Usually comets are icy as that is why you see the icy trail, but asteroids can be icy too.
Yes, icy is an adjective.