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Snow   /snoʊ/   Listen
Snow

noun
1.
Precipitation falling from clouds in the form of ice crystals.  Synonym: snowfall.
2.
A layer of snowflakes (white crystals of frozen water) covering the ground.
3.
English writer of novels about moral dilemmas in academe (1905-1980).  Synonyms: Baron Snow of Leicester, C. P. Snow, Charles Percy Snow.
4.
Street names for cocaine.  Synonyms: blow, C, coke, nose candy.
verb
(past & past part. snowed; pres. part. snowing)
1.
Fall as snow.
2.
Conceal one's true motives from especially by elaborately feigning good intentions so as to gain an end.  Synonyms: bamboozle, hoodwink, lead by the nose, play false, pull the wool over someone's eyes.



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"Snow" Quotes from Famous Books



... billows far out to a lashed and maddened main, strewn with human drift; and numb with horror she sinks swiftly to a long and final rest among purple algae! Even so, Edna, you stop your ears with shells, and my warning falls like snow-flakes that melt and vanish on the bosom ...
— St. Elmo • Augusta J. Evans

... are of a smaller size than dinner napkins, and are very pretty if they bear the initial letter of the family in the centre. Those of fine, double damask, with a simple design, such as a snow-drop or a mathematical figure, to match the table-cloth, are also pretty. In the end, the economy in the wear pays a young house- keeper to invest well in the best of napery—double damask, good Irish linen. Never buy ...
— Manners and Social Usages • Mrs. John M. E. W. Sherwood

... in the forest, or in the snow, he sleeps as warm, dines with as good an appetite, and associates as happily, as beside ...
— An English Grammar • W. M. Baskervill and J. W. Sewell

... his eyes to heaven, turning them often towards the most magnificent of castles which imprisoned the purest of noble young ladies. He lay down to sleep without supper, in the middle of a field between two furrows. The snow fell in large flakes. Next day Candide, all benumbed, dragged himself towards the neighbouring town which was called Waldberghofftrarbk-dikdorff, having no money, dying of hunger and fatigue, he stopped ...
— Candide • Voltaire

... him seemed, Like dreams, to come and go; Bright leagues of cherry-blossom gleamed, One sheet of living snow; The smoke above his father's door In gray soft eddyings hung; Must he then watch it rise no more, Doomed ...
— The World's Best Poetry, Volume 8 • Various


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