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It means "rotten ice", and you could be about to fall through the ice.
They could have drowned on the rotten ice," suggested Stein. "
You rule like a man dancing on rotten ice.
More and more often our skis broke through the surface on rotten ice.
He was walking on rotten ice now, Tyrion knew.
Where I could travel on skis, the men very often sank to their waists in rotten ice.
Guest right or no, Jon Snow knew he walked on rotten ice here.
Dropping a cat through rotten ice was the most serious mis- adventure.
One step, then another: avoiding the rotten ice, testing every pace, she worked her way steadily across the bridge.
- their morale is cracking up like rotten ice in a thaw.
Everything was just heaped there in the rotten ice with the sleet streaming off it.
He had learned to thrust his sledge ahead of him to see if it tilted, breaking through thin or rotten ice.
They were bleak and treacherous, like rotten ice.
The new ice, called rotten ice, is thinner and much weaker structurally.
Candle ice is a form of rotten ice.
Old rotten ice from the peak must have crashed down on it in the spring rains, and that part of the trail is gone for good.
It was almost out of reach, but the young gnoll's strong fingers gained a crumbling purchase on the rotten ice and snow.
You make a rotten ice maiden.
If King Shef was on the rotten ice last night, and survived, that was one test passed.
Make sure you belay out of the line of fire as the rotten ice comes plummeting down from your very worried leader.
It is called "rotten ice" or soft ice and is exceedingly dangerous.
The road was steep and narrow; the horses were struggling upward alongside an old glacier, pale with rotten ice.
Then the fury of the battle and the hurtling weight of the pack had broken the rotten ice beneath them.
Erasmus looked upslope to a broken terrain full of rotten ice, left over from Corrin's long winter season.