Search for: ice cream

21 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 121.4 (Gary Land)

… stands, ice-cream stores, soda fountains, baseball games, excursions, and newspapers.

23 EGW Index, vols. 1-4 (Topical Index), Ice cream.2

Ice cream, Ice cream, children should be taught to deny themselves of, for God’s cause CD 329

24 EGW Index, vols. 1-4 (Topical Index), Ice cream.3

Ice cream, objections to CD 332; 2SM 413

25 EGW Index, vols. 1-4 (Topical Index), Sugar.47

Sugar, See also Cake; Candy; Dessert; Ice cream; Pie; Sweets; Sweetmeat

26 EGW Index, vols. 1-4 (Topical Index), Sweet food, Sweet foods.3

Sweet food, Sweet foods, See also Cake; Candy; Cooky; Dessert; Ice cream; Pastry; Pie; Sugar

27 Etymology dictionary, p. affogato (n.).2

"hot espresso poured over vanilla ice cream and served as a dessert," by 1999, from Italian affogato, literally "drowned" (from the point of view of the ice cream).

28 Etymology dictionary, p. a la mode (adv.).2

… with ice cream is 1903, American English; earlier it was used of a kind of beef stew or soup (1753).

29 Etymology dictionary, p. cone (n.).3

… hold ice-cream." Cone-shell is from 1770, so called for its shape; cone-flower is from 1822, so called for its conical receptacles.

30 Etymology dictionary, p. Creamsicle (n.).2

small slab of ice cream surrounded by a layer of fruit-flavored water ice and mounted on a stick, 1932, a trademark name, merger of ice-cream and Popsicle .

31 Etymology dictionary, p. double (adj.).6

… an ice-cream cone made with two scoops (1936); the figurative sense is by 1940. Double bed "bed made to sleep two persons" is by 1779. Double life "a sustaining of two …

32 Etymology dictionary, p. enjoy (v.).3

… an ice cream cone, etc., when all she is doing is eating it, and Wright's "English Dialect Dictionary" (1900) reports widespread use in north and west England of …

33 Etymology dictionary, p. Eskimo (n.).3

… -coated ice cream bar" was introduced in 1922 and was at first a craze that drove up the price of cocoa beans on the New York market 50 percent in three months …

35 Etymology dictionary, p. freezer (n.).2

1847 as the name of a type of large tin can used in ice-cream manufacture; from freeze (v.) + -er (1). As a household appliance, from 1945. Freezer burn attested from 1929.

36 Etymology dictionary, p. hokey-pokey (n.).2

… cheap ice cream sold by street vendors (1884). In Philadelphia, and perhaps other places, it meant shaved ice with artificial flavoring. The words also were …

38 Etymology dictionary, p. ice-cream (n.).2

1744, earlier iced cream (1680s), "a confection made by congealing variously flavored cream or custard in a vessel surrounded with a freezing-mixture," from ice (n.) + cream (n.). For ice-cream cone (1909), see cone .

39 Etymology dictionary, p. jimmies (n.).2

bits of candy as ice cream topping, by 1963, American English, of uncertain origin. Earlier it meant "delirium tremens" (1900) from earlier jim-jam (1885).

40 Etymology dictionary, p. Neapolitan (n.).2

… of ice cream, from 1871; originally meaning both "ice cream of three layers and flavors" and "ice cream made with eggs added to the cream before freezing." In early …