dictionnaire Grecque - Anglais

ελληνικά - English

πάγος Anglais:

1. glacier glacier


The Perito Moreno glacier in Southern Argentina.
Australia is the only continent without any glacier
This is predicted to produce changes such as the melting glaciers, more extreme temperature ranges, a global rise in average sea levels.
Scientists say that many glaciers are getting smaller because they are melting.
The Earth’s glaciers are mostly near the North and South Poles and they can actually be hundreds of metres long.
This glacier's always moving, so we have to be careful.
An iceberg broke off from the glacier.
A 2005 Survey of 442 glaciers from the World Glacier Monitoring Service found that 90 percent of the world's glaciers are shrinking as the planet warms.
The glacier moves slowly.

Anglais mot "πάγος"(glacier) se produit dans des ensembles:

Mountains - Βουνά

2. ice ice


The ice melted.
I poured the wine in a plastic bag and then dipped it in ice water.
I like to put an ice cube into my coffee, because it's usually too hot.
Between meals, he usually manages to stow away a generous supply of candy, ice cream, popcorn and fruit.
The sea ice is highly variable - frozen solid during cold, calm weather and broken up in large areas of open water during storms.
When converting 1 mole of ice into water, and 1 mole of water into steam, which requires more energy?
People usually find it very difficult to break the ice when they meet someone extremely attractive for the first time.
He was still mumbling something about hospitals at the end of the party when he slipped on a piece of ice and broke his left leg.
Making a clean separation between the "useful" and the "useless" is about as straightforward as drawing the fine line between water and ice.
The biggest difference between bandy and floorball is that bandy is played on ice.
It is impossible to burn a copy of Dante's Inferno because the ice of the ninth layer of hell will put out any fires kindled with earlier pages.
I wonder if the sea level really will rise when the ice at the North Pole melts.
Water and ice are the same substance in different forms.
Your order? "Orange juice." "With ice?" "Yes." "Thanks for your business."
Emoto Masaru believes that within ice crystals you can read a message to mankind.