Meaning: To make people comfortable or more talkative at the beginning of a party, meeting, or any other social gathering. The noun form is "ice breaker." Examples: On the first day of class I always like to do something fun to break the ice. He saw he needed to break the ice so he told…
Break the Ice Revisited – US Adult Literacy
Breaking the Ice: Learn the Meaning of this Popular Idiom
This product contains 34 idioms for you to use weekly in your classroom. Each idiom is illustrated in poster form to display for the week. In
Idiom of the Week - Posters and Student Pages
I Literally Cried': Teachers Describe Their Transition to Science-Based Reading Instruction
American English at State - How do you break the ice with new friends? #AmericanEnglish
english idioms – US Adult Literacy
KoAlpaca/seed_tasks.jsonl at main · Beomi/KoAlpaca · GitHub
stanford_alpaca/seed_tasks.jsonl at main · tatsu-lab/stanford_alpaca · GitHub
Back to School: Ice Breaker & Idioms
contrast-sets/quoref/quoref_original_subset_20191206_merged.json at main · allenai/contrast-sets · GitHub
The University of Georgia Intensive English Program - #WordWednesday: This week's idiom is “drive up the wall.” It is an idiom used to describe something that is very irritating and annoying. One
Idiom of the Week: Lose It – US Adult Literacy