Citations:icebergy

Adjective: "characteristic of an iceberg"

 * 1976 — Woody Guthrie, Seeds of Man: An Experience Lived and Dreamed, E. P. Dutton & Co. (1976), ISBN 9780525199366, page 9:
 * Flaming as our cab seat was, of course, to throw our doors wide open like we did was the worst mistake we could make — to cause such a hard blow of icebergy wind to puff the fiery flames higher.
 * 1991 — Jim Ritchie, Shocco Tales: Southern Fried Sagas, self-published (1997), ISBN 9780965600200, page 45:
 * Remember those signs? They had a sort of icebergy motif and the sign said "IT'S COOL INSIDE!!!" with the icebergy stuff dripping all over the word COOL.
 * 1993 — Brian D'Amato, Beauty, Dell, ISBN 9780440212829, unknown page:
 * It wasn't just flat ice anymore; the chunks had piled up into big icebergy formations with sand all over them,

Adjective: "(of an area) filled with icebergs"

 * 1900 — The Harmsworth Magazine, Volume 5, page 578:
 * "Seventeen pounds a month," replies Cap'n Swift, promptly. "It's a dangerous, icebergy sort of cruise, you know, and I've a wife and eight daughters depending on me.
 * 1910 — Mrs. George Cran, A Woman in Canada, J. B. Lippincott Company (1910), page 9:
 * Canada was an ugly, cold, icebergy place; it had miles of flat wheat; it had no flowers; it was ugly, and I hated ugliness.
 * 1985 — Cost and Management, Volumes 58-59, page 27:
 * It lies some 200 miles east of Newfoundland in tough, icebergy, storm-prone Atlantic waters that have already claimed one drilling rig — the Ocean Ranger — and the lives of its crew.
 * 1996 — John Skow, "Heave To, Felix! Thar Blow Th' Faeroes!", Outside, January 1996:
 * For good nautical fun, nothing beats the blizzardy, icebergy waters of the North Sea.

Adjective: "(figuratively) cold or unfriendly in manner"

 * 1857 — Mary W. Janvrin, "How Jenny Was Won", Peterson's Magazine, May 1857:
 * "Well, so it went on for weeks and weeks — Jenny chatting and playing the agreeable to all others, but decidedly icebergy toward me.
 * 1907 — Richard Marsh, The Girl and the Miracle, Methuen & Co. (1907), page 220:
 * she won't see any one — she'll hardly even see me; and when I ask her a question a sour, icebergy sort of look comes into her face which gives me a positive pain to look at.
 * 1908 — Samuel Rutherford Crockett, Deep Moat Grange, The Copp Clark Company Limited (1908), page 120:
 * "Who is Harriet Caw?" she asked in a kind of icebergy voice, quite differently pitched from her usual.
 * 1909 — Richard Marsh, A Royal Indiscretion, Methuen & Co., page 128:
 * "Am I rude?"
 * "Well, if you're not rude, you're very nearly rude; anyhow you're icebergy, which is worse.
 * 1912 — Mary Fisher, Kirstie, Thomas Y. Crowell Company (1912), page 6:
 * I'm not just as sane as you are, dear cool, old, icebergy Kirstie Macdonald, whose pulse never knew a gallop fiercer than 60 degrees in the shade.
 * 1913 — Doris Egerton Jones, Peter Piper, George W. Jacobs & Company, page 112:
 * "Call her Trixie, Peter, as she told you, and don't be too stiff and icebergy.
 * 1921 — Arthur Stringer, The Wine of Life, Alfred A. Knopf (1921), page 317:
 * "Because you're so icebergy," she told him, looking down at the wrist which he had imprisoned.

Adjective: "(of a salad) containing a lot of iceberg lettuce"

 * 1994 — Alison Cook, "Keen on Kaldi", Houston Press, 14 July 1994:
 * Witness their icebergy "White Trash Salad" that mutated to the less incendiary "Blanco Basura" before disappearing from the menu entirely after diners proved immune to the joke.