From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishice-coldˌice-ˈcold adjective COLDextremely cold ice-cold drinks
Examples from the Corpus
ice-cold• ice-cold beer• I could do with an ice-cold beer.• The Dallas Cowboys' offense was ice-cold in the first half.• It was an ice-cold June Sunday.• Cloud swirled up from the valleys, clearing spasmodically to reveal distant peaks, ice-cold lakes and the long ridge in front.• The kids were rewarded with ice-cold lemonade.• The sergeant sat down, placed his feet into the ice-cold potassium permanganate solution and heaved a euphoric sigh of relief.• Her boat is always loaded with new friends and ice-cold sodas.• She was standing in blackness in the middle of a narrow, ice-cold stream.• An ice-cold thought came into her mind.• He survived five minutes of ice-cold water before towelling down.• Only two persons in the audience reacted to this sentence, but to them it was like being doused with ice-cold water.