To Put (Some One) on Ice
Posted by S. Ryan on March 05, 2003
In Reply to: To Put (Some One) on Ice posted by ESC on March 05, 2003
: : : Hello, I was just hoping to learn the meaning and origin of the phrase "to put (some one) on ice". Thanks in advance for any assistance.
: : Over here in the UK, to put someone or something on ice means to put to one side, to decide to deal with the person or thing at a much later date. I suspect the idiom comes from the storage of food, where literally putting some perishable item on ice meant that you could indeed come back to it at a later stage.
: PUT ON ICE - "Set aside; stored; kept in reserve until needed. The ice house or ice box, filled with blocks of ice cut from a lake or a river, predates the gas or electric refrigerator. People were putting food on blocks of ice a century ago to preserve it. The idea transferred readily to things other than food. Paul L. Ford offered this version in 'The Honorable Peter Stirling' : 'They say she's never been able to find a man good enough for her, so she's keeping herself on ice." From The Dictionary of Cliches by James Rogers (Ballantine Books, New York, 1985).
: interesting, so far. Here, to "put someone on ice" or to "ice" someone means to do away with them, to kill them.
- To Put (Some One) on Ice ESC
03/05/03
- To Put (Some One) on Ice S. Ryan 03/05/03
- To Put (Some
One) on Ice ESC 03/05/03
- To Put (Some One) on Ice Lewis 03/06/03
- To Put (Some
One) on Ice ESC 03/05/03
- To Put (Some One) on Ice S. Ryan 03/05/03
- To Put (Some One) on Ice S. Ryan 03/05/03