Not unless it's used as a compound modifier. For example: I went ice skating at the ice-skating rink.
Ice skating without ice.
Because Ice skating is the act of skating on ice.
Ice skating without ice.
No. It should say, "Mary enjoyed neither roller skating nor ice skating."
ice skating
are ice skating and figure skating the same.
I think ice skating
Ice skating, or if you do competitive skating it is called figure skating.
No, it's completely different. In-line skating is on wheels, while ice skating is on blades and actually on the ice. You can jump and spin in ice skating, but not during in-line skating.
They clean the surface of the ice rink, for safer ice skating.
Ice Skating began when a couple of English men were ice skating on boots