From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishglaciergla‧ci‧er /ˈɡlæsiə $ ˈɡleɪʃər/ ●○○ noun [countable] SGa large mass of ice which moves slowly down a mountain valley → glacial
Examples from the Corpus
glacier• Just a short distance away, looming above a glacier, was the dazzling, ice-hung bulk of Chonku Chuli.• It was as tall and cold as a glacier rolling down a valley, crunching trees like matchsticks.• Official archaeology views it as the chance remains of a glacier.• But the Kangshung glacier, too, was deserted.• There is now a strong case for a realistic dialogue between those studying glacier dynamics and those studying forms.• I tried to count all the glaciers and gave up at 30.• The way of the glaciers allowed him to fuse traditional creationism with the insights of modern science.• The streams gradually filled with gravel and left behind these ridges when the glaciers melted.Origin glacier (1700-1800) French glace “ice”, from Latin glacies