How to use in-sentence of “froze”:
+ Channel Five’s “Gadget Show” cooked a flash drive with propane; froze it with dry ice; submerged it in various acidic liquids; ran over it with a jeep and fired it against a wall with a mortar.
+ Some of the people froze to death in the snow.
+ The mountains that froze the world.
+ In the 17th and 18th century, at a time some call the “Little Ice Age”, the Thames often froze over in the winter.
+ The government under Vladimir Putin then froze shares of Yukos shortly thereafter on tax charges.
+ He cut the body in pieces and froze the pieces for later consumption.
+ Bradford wrote that they set off in freezing weather, “and when the set sail the salt spray froze on their coats, as if they had been glazed”.

Example sentences of “froze”:
+ On his way back, Scott and three companions met a blizzard and froze to death while waiting for it to finish.
+ His forces were routed at the Battle of Sarikamis, and many of his men froze to death.
+ Many of the men were ill, and when they left the salt spray froze on their coats.
+ Many German soldiers starved or froze to death.
+ Also, since they froze long ago, snow crystals and air bubbles inside are kept in good condition.
+ That winter the James River froze over, and the settlers were forced to live in the ruins.
+ Around September 16 it was nearly froze for some time in the mid-Atlantic about 1000 miles east of Bermuda, and became a weak hurricane.
+ On his way back, Scott and three companions met a blizzard and froze to death while waiting for it to finish.
+ His forces were routed at the Battle of Sarikamis, and many of his men froze to death.
+ The glacial lake left behind a soft, varved landscape, gathering silt and sand in the summertime due to the influx of glacial meltwater and clay in the wintertime as the lake froze until it was later drained.
+ The motorised sleds eventually froze up.
+ When dropped into other bodies of water, it froze that, too, which resulted in all bodies of water on earth being frozen by Ice-nine.
+ According to Bradford, they set off in below freezing weather, many of the men already being ill, “and when the set sail the salt spray froze on their coats, as if they had been glazed”.
