“It’s lolly ice. Ice lolly is an American term. Whether you’re a kid brought up in Scottie Road or anywhere else in Liverpool you never went up to an ice cream van or shop and asked for an ice lolly.
It's a Lolly made of Ice! Lolly Ice!!!
I'll have a Lolly Ice please,
Thank God you called it by the right name, sick of all the woolie backs and plastics calling it an Ice Lolly - gobshites...
A song Beth Chapman (wife of bounty hunter Duane "Dog" Chapman) likes to sing to tweaked out freaks addicted to crystal meth before throwing them back in jail.
British term for a frozen confection on a stick, equivalent to the American term "popsicle." In the plural sense, the term "lolly ices" may be used, e.g., "one ice lolly," or "an entire selection of lolly ices."
It was a hot day in Merseyside, and Bill stopped by the ASDA to buy a box of lolly ices, but they were sold out; a clerk told him there wasn't an ice lolly to be had all the way to Blackpool.
We were that poor in our family that my Gran used to give us an cucumber from out of the fridge and tell us in her thick Dublin accent "Here you go son, eat your Irish ice lolly"