Good writers don't try to make new words for sounds. Just write "the ice cracked" and that will tell your readers all they need to know.
The sound of the popping comes from the ice cube shattering or cracking. The liquid that the ice cubes are dropped into is warmer than the cubes, so the cube startes to warm, which causes the ice to expand, making it crack and hence the popping sound.
water
Ice.
If you stand in one location on ice then your weight is directed through your body to the ice directly under your feet. This means that the weight bearing area of the ice is limited an can break. By lying down you spread the weight factor across more area reducing the stress in one small area to a much larger one
Ice block
It makes like a cracking noise
Ice cracking is one sound that begins with I.
You would here the blade scratching the ice.
The sound of the popping comes from the ice cube shattering or cracking. The liquid that the ice cubes are dropped into is warmer than the cubes, so the cube startes to warm, which causes the ice to expand, making it crack and hence the popping sound.
Ice cracking is a phenomenon one observes when glacial ice flows into water. The ice flows based on gravity. This is a constant process, and the ice cracking is also, therefore, constant.
I'm no scientist but I am sure it is just the effect of the chill ice hitting the water. The less cool temperture makes the ice instantly crack. Why, I'm not quite sure:)
The novel Ice Candy Man (AKA Cracking India) was written by Bapsi Sidhwa
Nova - 1974 Cracking the Ice Age 24-10 was released on: USA: 31 December 1996
the sound of the leaves are as crunchy as... burnt toast a bag of chips bones cracking crumbling paper?
water wind (natural diasters) and ice cracking
Yes, if the sound waves were generated with a frequency that matched the natural frequency of the ice, resonance would occur. If the amplitude i.e. the sound was loud enough, and the frequencies were matched, the ice could vibrate with enough force causing it to shatter.
You get them at the room with the cracking ice on the left and right room.