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When you want ice in your drink, you say 'on the rocks.' If you are ordering straight liquor, you would ask for the alcohol Neat (i.e. 'whiskey neat' or 'vodka neat'). If you are ordering a mixed drink such as a vodka tonic or Long Island iced tea, and you want it without ice, usually you say 'straight up.'
Solid water is called ice.
Ice.
Water vapor that changes in to an ice crystal is called deposition. This what happens in the formation of snow.
Melting. Think of ice. When you melt ice, it turns into a liquid, when you freeze ice it turns into a solid. Improved: Melting. Think of ice. When you melt ice, it turns into WATER (a liquid), when you freeze (ice) WATER it turns into a solid, WHICH IS CALLED 'ICE'.
A serving of a spirit without ice or water added in it is called neat.Some places will also serve it neat if you ask them for straight (however other places will add water).
Scotch neat is a scotch with no ice.
Would you like your drink neat or on the rocks? -->> neat = without ice just as it is on the rocks = with ice
Neat in general just means with no ice.
Liquid Ice (i don't know)
A whisk(e)y drunk neat means a glass of whisk(e)y, nothing else added. "On the rocks" gives you one or a couple of ice cubes, and "straight"? Depends, You might get it "neat" or some whisk(e)y that may be diluted from being shaken or stirred with ice cubes.
When you want ice in your drink, you say 'on the rocks.' If you are ordering straight liquor, you would ask for the alcohol Neat (i.e. 'whiskey neat' or 'vodka neat'). If you are ordering a mixed drink such as a vodka tonic or Long Island iced tea, and you want it without ice, usually you say 'straight up.'
ice water
When ice transforms to water, it is called melting. If it is dry ice, and it evaporates, that is called sublimation.
The sold form of water is called ice. Many people use it to keep their drinks cool. 8-Pyerr we knew dat
A gelati.
Ice