An icy road at -1 has more moisture in the ice, meaning that their will be more water in the icy mixture keeping it on the road. More water=more ice. When the temperature drops further it reacts by extracting the moisture, condensing the crystals in the ice. It acts almost like a drying effect on the roads. There will still be ice and it will be dangerous. However with all this said, it just depends on how much precipitation is involved with the road. A road that hasn't been wet (snow or freezing rain) for days is much safer than a freshly covered one. That is the bottom line. Look out for wind, curves and animals. Slow down.
sleet
Hail
to melt the ice put salt
sleet hail and snow
there is no such thing as Icy breeze from sword that waves. you can't just make up random phrases and expect them to be translated to japanese.
same drinks you drink, water, milk, sodas, alcohol (depends on age)
Actually, the word "icy" is an adjective.
(D) Even the characters give off a chill, blowing their frosty breath into their hands and confronting the visitor with icy stares.
No, icy is an adjective, as it adds information to a noun, eg: the icy road, or the icy pond. The noun form is iciness or ice
Usually comets are icy as that is why you see the icy trail, but asteroids can be icy too.
Yes, icy is an adjective.
The airport code for Icy Bay Airport is ICY.
There are many driving conditions that it could be dangerous to accelerate. These include when it is icy, raining, snowing, or if you are under the influence of drugs or alcohol.
it has rings but not icy rings
Icy is an adjective.
Icy road conditions