Ice cream is two words. The plural is ice creams
Ice cream is two words, and neither of them comes from Greek. Ice comes from Old Norse, and cream comes from Anglo-French.
Not only may it be, it should be.
ice-cream
licking
ice cream
In English they are used to combine two words in order to form a new one ("a 3-hour long journey, good-looking, ice-cream). Some words are spelled with or without a hyphen, as different schools of grammar have conflicting views on the matter (such as "no one" and "no-one", "ice-cream", "icecream" and "ice cream").
Ice cream,igloo,Illinois
Compound words are words formed by combining two or more individual words. Some examples of separated compound words are "sunflower," "raincoat," and "ice cream."
Ice-cream, Ice-cold water, In the sun
''Danish Iceberg'' & ''bonjus'' are the bets two Lebanese ice cream companies.
He eats ice cream - Does he eat ice cream? He ate the ice cream - Did he eat the ice cream? He is eating the ice cream - Is he eating the ice cream? He was eating ice cream - Was he eating ice cream? They have eaten the ice cream - Have they eaten the ice cream? He has eaten the ice cream - Has he eaten the ice cream? He had eaten the ice cream - Had he eaten the ice cream? He had been eating ice cream - Had he been eating ice cream? He will eat ice cream to morrow - Will he eat ice ream tomorrow? He is going to eat ice cream tomorrow - Is he going to eat ice cream tomorrow?