n. diamonds; jewels. (Underworld.) : That old dame has tons of ice in her hotel room.
n. cocaine; crystalline cocaine. (Drugs.) : Max deals mostly in ice but can get you almost anything.
tv. to kill someone; to kill an informer. (Underworld. See also chill.) : Mr. Big ordered Sam to ice you-know-who.
tv. to ignore someone. (Underworld. See also chill.) : Bart iced Sam for obvious reasons.
tv. to embarrass someone; to make someone look foolish. : Don't ice me in front of my friends.
n. money given as a bribe, especially to the police. (Underworld.) : A lot of those cops take ice.
mod. excellent; very cool. : Her answer was ice, and she really put down that guy.
Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions by Richard A. Spears.Fourth Edition. Copyright 2007. Published by McGraw Hill.
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