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"Break the Ice" received critical acclaim, with reviewers praising its lyrics, production, Spears' vocal performance and deemed it a strong electronic song from the record. "Break the Ice" was a moderate success, reaching the top ten in Canada and Finland, and charting within the top 40 in Australia, New Zealand and many other European countries.
"Break the Ice", a song by Accept released as a bonus track on the CD version of their album Eat the Heat "Break the Ice", theme song of the 2012 Junior Eurovision Song Contest by Kim-Lian Break the Ice (festival) , a hardcore punk festival held in Melbourne, Australia in 2012–2014
"Breaking the Ice" (Star Trek: Enterprise), an episode of Star Trek: Enterprise "Breaking the Ice" , an episode of Frasier; Breaking the Ice (organization), a peace project founded by Heskel Nathaniel; Breaking the Ice (role-playing game), a 2005 dating game by Emily Care Boss "Stanley and Stella in: Breaking the Ice", an animated short film
An expression, today falling into disuse, is la semaine des quatre jeudis ("the week of the four Thursdays"), as in "that will happen (or not) during the week of the four Thursdays" (Thursday was the break in the school week). The expression aux calendes grecques ("to the Greek Calends") was also used for indefinite postponement, derived from ...
An idiom is a common word or phrase with a figurative, non-literal meaning that is understood culturally and differs from what its composite words' denotations would suggest; i.e. the words together have a meaning that is different from the dictionary definitions of the individual words (although some idioms do retain their literal meanings – see the example "kick the bucket" below).
The best Hinge prompts invite someone into a conversation, and showing your geeky side is a easy, fun and low-stakes way to break the ice. What you can say: I’m writing a science-fiction novel.
Some theater history buffs think "break a leg" might be a cousin of the German phrase "Hals- und Beinbruch," which means "neck and leg break." Others connect it to the Hebrew blessing "hatzlakha u ...
Break the Ice" was released instead and "Radar" was chosen as the fourth single. It had already charted in the CIS, New Zealand and Sweden prior to its official release, even reaching the top ten in Sweden. [90] However, the release was pushed back when Spears began recording new material for her sixth studio album Circus (2008). [91]