"Popsicles" as we know them today were originally named "Epsicles" (sometimes called "Epsicle Ice Pops") after their inventor, Frank Epperson.
His children took to calling them "Pop's 'sicles" - in 1924, their influence prompted him to change the name of his frozen confection to the "Popsicle."
popsicle snow cone
popsicle corn nuts popsicle corn nuts popsicle corn nuts popsicle corn nuts popsicle corn nuts
Firecracker popsicle s
they make a tiny popsicle with the one flavor then they put another coat of the ice then another flavor and so on....
That is the correct spelling of the word "Popsicle" (still a trademark term, widely used generically as popsicle to mean any ice pop).
An 11 year old boy named Frank Epperson invented the popsicle. It was an accident. He left his drink outside overnight with the stirring stick still in it. In the morning, he found it and started licking it like a lollipop. That's how the popsicle was born. It was originally called the Epsicle, but when he had children, they were always asking their 'pop' for an Epsicle. Then the name Popsicle just stuck.
Keep it in the freezer, or keep it really cold. Another way to stop a popsicle from freezing is to eat it right away.
The trademark name is "Fudgsicle" (from fudge popsicle).
The trademark name for ice pops is Popsicle.
Yes, the word 'Popsicle' is a noun, a word for a thing.The noun 'Popsicle' is a proper noun, the name of a specific product, a registered trademark of Unilever.
a popsicle
50 dollars for a popsicle