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icebreaker
(redirected from Ice breaking)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.02 sec.
icebreaker, ship of special hull design and wide beam, with relatively flat bottom, designed to force its way through ice. When the icebreaker charges into the ice at full speed, its sharply inclined bow, meeting the edge of the ice, rises upon it, and the weight of the vessel causes the ice to collapse. A well-designed icebreaker is able to force its way through ice up to 35-ft (10.7-m) thick. In many northern seaports, especially in Russia, Canada, and the Great Lakes area of the United States, water-borne traffic in winter is only possible with the use of icebreakers. Icebreakers have been widely used in the exploration of the Arctic and the Antarctic. The first notable icebreaker was the Pilot (1870), used to maintain communication between Kronstadt and St. Petersburg. In 1959, the Soviet Union launched the first nuclear-powered icebreaker, the Lenin.
icebreaker
1. a vessel with a reinforced bow for breaking up the ice in bodies of water to keep channels open for navigation
2. any tool or device for breaking ice into smaller pieces

icebreaker [′īs‚brāk·ər]
(naval architecture)
A vessel designed for operating in and breaking heavy ice, having a special-shaped, reinforced bow, protected propellers, and powerful engines.

(security, jargon)icebreaker - A program designed for cracking security on a system.

See also: ICE.


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So European ship building companies, known the world over for their smaller vessel design with reinforced ice breaking hulls, were called in.
Adrift captures high-speed shots of ice breaking up and floating across water and dirt, moving and making new patterns in the earth, all to the sound of the whistling wind.
Somewhere in the back of the mind of every ice fisherman is the nightmare vision of the ice breaking, and kerplunk, there you go.
 
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