If you fill a pitcher with water and ice and then pour the ice cold water into a cup ????!


Question: but when pouring this chilled water you dont get any ice in the cup........is the water in the cup still considered Ice water?


Answers: but when pouring this chilled water you dont get any ice in the cup........is the water in the cup still considered Ice water?

I would just call it "ice cold water"

no, just cold water

Officially?? I doubt there is a federal law that covers this - call it Ice Water if you feel like it...

Alas... Perhaps it was never meant to be ice water...

no, because there is no ice in the cup

go pour me a glass and we'll see

The water in the pitcher isn't really ice water either, it is iced water. You can either have water or you can have ice. To ice means that you are adding to something such as icing on a cake would be an iced cake, iced tea, and so on. The water in the cup would be cold water, but not even as cold as it was when you poured it from the pitcher because the cup you are pouring it into has a higher temperature than the pitcher simply because it is at room temperature and not at he chilled temperature that the pitcher is with the ICED water in it.

Nah, it's just very cold water. :P

no

ice+water=ice water ( in the same glass)

be careful!!!! this could be serious.





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