释义 |
snow
snow S0514600 (snō)n.1. Frozen precipitation consisting of hexagonally symmetrical ice crystals that form soft, white flakes.2. A falling of snow; a snowstorm.3. Something resembling snow, as:a. The white specks on a television screen resulting from weak reception.b. Slang Cocaine.c. Slang Heroin.v. snowed, snow·ing, snows v.intr. To fall as or in snow.v.tr.1. To cover, shut off, or close off with snow: We were snowed in.2. Slang To overwhelm with insincere talk, especially with flattery.Phrasal Verb: snow under1. To overwhelm: I was snowed under with work.2. To defeat by a very large margin. [Middle English, from Old English snāw; see sneigwh- in Indo-European roots.]snow (snəʊ) n1. (Physical Geography) precipitation from clouds in the form of flakes of ice crystals formed in the upper atmosphere. 2. (Physical Geography) a layer of snowflakes on the ground3. (Physical Geography) a fall of such precipitation4. anything resembling snow in whiteness, softness, etc5. (Electronics) the random pattern of white spots on a television or radar screen, produced by noise in the receiver and occurring when the signal is weak or absent6. (Recreational Drugs) slang cocaine7. (Elements & Compounds) See carbon dioxide snowvb8. (intr; with it as subject) to be the case that snow is falling9. (tr; usually passive, foll by over, under, in, or up) to cover or confine with a heavy fall of snow10. (often with: it as subject) to fall or cause to fall as or like snow11. (tr) slang US and Canadian to deceive or overwhelm with elaborate often insincere talk. See snow job12. be snowed under to be overwhelmed, esp with paperwork[Old English snāw; related to Old Norse snjōr, Gothic snaiws, Old High German snēo, Greek nipha] ˈsnowless adj ˈsnowˌlike adj
Snow (snəʊ) n (Biography) C(harles) P(ercy), Baron. 1905–80, British novelist and physicist. His novels include the series Strangers and Brothers (1949–70)snow (snoʊ) n. 1. a. precipitation in the form of hexagonal crystals of ice, usu. grouped together as snowflakes, formed directly from water vapor freezing in air. b. these flakes as forming a layer on the ground. c. the fall of these flakes or a storm during which they fall. 2. something resembling a layer of these flakes in whiteness, softness, or the like. 3. Literary. a. white blossoms. b. the white color of snow. 4. Slang. cocaine or heroin. 5. white spots or bands on a television screen caused by a weak signal. v.i. 6. (of snow) to fall: It snowed heavily last night. 7. to descend like snow. v.t. 8. to let fall as or like snow. 9. to cover, obstruct, confine, etc., with or as if with snow: The town was snowed in by the storm. 10. Slang. to persuade or deceive by insincere talk or flattery. 11. snow under, a. to cover with or bury in snow. b. to overwhelm. c. to defeat overwhelmingly. [before 900; (n.) Middle English; Old English snāw, c. Old Frisian snē, Old Saxon, Old High German snēo, Old Norse snǣr, Gothic snaiws, Latin nix, Greek níps, Old Church Slavonic sněgŭ] snow (snō) Crystals of ice that form from water vapor in the atmosphere and fall to earth.snow - Technically a mineral, it is Teutonic in origin, from an Indo-European root shared by the Latin words niv-/nix and Greek nipha; the spelling snow first appeared in English around 1200.See also related terms for mineral.SnowSee also atmosphere; climate; clouds; cold; rain; weather. chionomaniaa mania for snow.chionophobiaan abnormal fear or dislike of snow.Snow See Also: NATURE, WEATHER - Big flakes … floating like parachutes in the still air —Frank Ross
- Drifts [of snow] heaping themselves like scaling-ladders against the walls —O. Henry
- (Those) drifts of soft snow looked like featherbeds —Scott Spencer
- A dry pellety snow hitting the sidewalk like uncooked grains of rice —Marge Piercy
- Falling snow … sinking into the ground as slowly as breadcrumbs thrown to fishes sink through water —Boris Pasternak
- The fine snow had melted (on his hair and his eyelashes) and sparkled now like raindrops in a sunshower —Harvey Swados
- Flakes … bob and sail like moths across the driveway —Anon
- The flakes fall like asterisks —James Reiss
- Flakes of snow … falling like feathers from the sky —Grimm Brothers
- The flakes … seemed thick as tarts —Peter De Vries
- Flakes swarming around the streetlamps like soft, huge moths —George Garrett
- The flakes were as large as an hour’s circular tatting —O. Henry
The comparison is a vivid one but with tatting no longer a familiar pastime, a brief explanation would be needed for any but needlework aficionados. - Flakes were like feathers —Frank Swinnerton
- (The sundial was) heaped with a foot-high frosting of snow like a tall, fantastic cake —Davis Grubb
- (Snow was still falling,) heavy flakes like goose feathers —Jilly Cooper
- (A row of) icicles like the crystal drops of a chandelier hung from the roof —H. E. Bates
- Icicles like the teeth of fish —Saul Bellow
- Icicles sparkling at the eaves like pendant blades of glass —William Styron
- It [snow] fell like a great armistice, bringing all simple struggles to an end —Elizabeth Hardwick
- It looks pretty in the garden [in the snow], like a living Christmas —Janet Flanner
- A light fringe of snow lay like a cape on the shoulders of his overcoat and like toecaps on the toes of his galoshes —James Joyce
- Lightly and whitely as wheat from the grain, thickly and quickly as thoughts through the brain, so fast and so dumb do the snowflakes come —Grace Denio Lichtfield
- Like an army defeated, the snow has retreated —William Wordsworth
- Long icicles, like crystal daggers —Oscar Wilde
- (I looked down at the street … at the) masses of snow like dirty suds —Saul Bellow
- Melted [snow], leaving the gray grass like a pallet, closely pressed —Wallace Stevens
- One of those brilliant, glittery snows that ought to emit some glorious sound with each crystal falling to earth, something transcendent like a Bach cantata —Lynne Sharon Schwartz
The musical comparison is particularly appropriate to the novel, Disturbances in the Field, in which it appeared, as its main character is a classical musician. - The pilings of snow were like the white waves of a white sea —Truman Capote
- (Her feet disperse the) powdery snow, that rises up like smoke —William Wordsworth
- Snow as smooth to see as cake frosting and as light as powder —Ernest Hemingway
- The snow at the roadside full of bubbles like white of egg beaten up —Joyce Cary
- The snow began to spill down like quiet feathers —H. E. Bates
- The snow came down last night like moths —Richard Wilbur
A simile to begin a poem entitled First Snow in Alsace. - Snow … came in thick tufts like new wool, washed before the weaver spins it —Leslie Silko
- Snow … comes down like lace —Marge Piercy
- Snow … decking the fields and trees with white as for a fairy wedding —Jerome K. Jerome
- Snow … driving him like a fusillade of frozen needles —T. Coraghessan Boyle
- Snow fell in swift spirals, floating like gulls into the tree branches —Jean Stafford
- Snowflakes dove at our window like fat moths —Donald McCaig
- Snowflakes grew bigger and bigger, till at last they looked like big white chickens —Hans Christian Andersen
- Snowflakes … large as white carnations —Janet Flanner
- Snow flakes shone like silver —Hugh Walpole
- Snowflakes sifting like crumbs into the yard —Paul Theroux
- The [blindingly thick] snowflakes tormented him like a swarm of silver bees —G. K. Chesterton
- The snow [during snow storm] flapped like an endless white blanket —Scott Spencer
- Snow flying quick as thought —Adrienne Rich
- Snow had begun to fall. It made the sidewalk a spotted hide, like leopard skin —Rosellen Brown
- Snow had fallen like a fine dust —Martin Cruz Smith
- The snow is now coming like dollar-sized confetti —John Wainwright
- Snow … it’s like inebriation because it’s very pleasing when it’s coming, but very unpleasant when it’s going —Ogden Nash
- The snow lay soft like a down pillow —Thomas Mann
- Snow lies like a down mattress over the earth —Lu Hsün
- Snow … lighted the streets like moonlight —Jean Stafford
- Snow, like sheep’s wool, only whiter —Gillian Tindall
- The snow like the fuzz the morning after too much Stolichnaya —Derek Lambert
Lambert’s suspense novel, The Red House, is set in Russia and so the reference to a Russian drink. - Snow poured down like salt —Helen Hudson
- Snow … settling like wool on the unmown grass —H. E. Bates
- Snow smooth as the sky can shed —William Wordsworth
- Snow … soft as froth and easy as ashes —W. R. Rodgers
- Snow sparkles like eyesight falling to earth —Wallace Stevens
- Snow was falling in larger flakes, like a multitude of frozen moths —Ellen Glasgow
- The snow was yellow … with orange seeping into its honey color like an aftertaste at sunset —Boris Pasternak
- Snow will settle like a sheet over all live color —Frank O’Hara
snow Past participle: snowed Gerund: snowing
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it is snowing |
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it has snowed |
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it was snowing |
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it had snowed |
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it will have snowed |
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it will be snowing |
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it has been snowing |
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it will have been snowing |
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it had been snowing |
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it would have snowed |
snowPrecipitation falling from clouds where the temperature is below 32°F (0°C).ThesaurusNoun | 1. | snow - precipitation falling from clouds in the form of ice crystalssnowfalldownfall, precipitation - the falling to earth of any form of water (rain or snow or hail or sleet or mist)snow flurry, flurry - a light brief snowfall and gust of wind (or something resembling that); "he had to close the window against the flurries"; "there was a flurry of chicken feathers"whiteout - an arctic atmospheric condition with clouds over snow produce a uniform whiteness and objects are difficult to see; occurs when the light reflected off the snow equals the light coming through the cloudsflake, snowflake - a crystal of snow | | 2. | snow - a layer of snowflakes (white crystals of frozen water) covering the groundsnowball - snow pressed into a ball for throwing (playfully)layer - a relatively thin sheetlike expanse or region lying over or under anotherflake, snowflake - a crystal of snowcorn snow - granular snow formed by alternate thawing and freezingcrud - heavy wet snow that is unsuitable for skiing | | 3. | Snow - English writer of novels about moral dilemmas in academe (1905-1980)Baron Snow of Leicester, C. P. Snow, Charles Percy Snow | | 4. | snow - street names for cocainenose candy, coke, blow, Ccocain, cocaine - a narcotic (alkaloid) extracted from coca leaves; used as a surface anesthetic or taken for pleasure; can become powerfully addictive | Verb | 1. | snow - fall as snow; "It was snowing all night"come down, precipitate, fall - fall from clouds; "rain, snow and sleet were falling"; "Vesuvius precipitated its fiery, destructive rage on Herculaneum" | | 2. | snow - conceal one's true motives from especially by elaborately feigning good intentions so as to gain an end; "He bamboozled his professors into thinking that he knew the subject well"bamboozle, lead by the nose, play false, pull the wool over someone's eyes, hoodwinkdeceive, lead astray, betray - cause someone to believe an untruth; "The insurance company deceived me when they told me they were covering my house" |
snownoun snowflakes, blizzard, snowfall, snowstorm, sleet, snowdrift They tramped through the falling snow.Related words adjective niveous like chionomania fear chionophobiaTranslationssnow (snəu) noun frozen water vapour that falls to the ground in soft white flakes. We woke up to find snow on the ground; We were caught in a heavy snow-shower; About 15 centimetres of snow had fallen overnight. 雪 雪 verb to shower down in, or like, flakes of snow. It's snowing heavily. 下雪 下雪ˈsnowy adjective1. full of, or producing a lot of, snow. The weather has been very snowy recently. 多雪的 多雪的2. white like snow. the old man's snowy (white) hair. 雪白的 雪白的ˈsnowball noun a ball of snow pressed hard together, especially made by children for throwing, as a game. 雪球 雪球ˈsnowboard noun a board on which a person can stand and glide over snow for sport. 滑雪板 滑雪板ˈsnow-capped adjective (of mountains etc) having tops which are covered with snow. snow-capped peaks. 積雪蓋頂的 积雪盖顶的ˈsnowdrift noun a bank of snow blown together by the wind. There were deep snowdrifts at the side of the road. (被風吹成的)雪堆 (被风吹成的)雪堆 ˈsnowfall noun1. a fall or shower of snow that settles on the ground. There was a heavy snowfall last night. 下雪 下雪2. the amount of snow that falls in a certain place. The snowfall last year was much higher than average. 降雪量 降雪量ˈsnowflake noun one of the soft, light flakes composed of groups of crystals, in which snow falls. A few large snowflakes began to fall from the sky. 雪花 雪花ˈsnowstorm noun a heavy fall of snow especially accompanied by a strong wind. 暴風雪 暴风雪ˌsnow-ˈwhite adjective white like snow. 雪白的 雪白的snowed under overwhelmed eg with a great deal of work. Last week I was absolutely snowed under with work. 手頭有許多事務的,忙碌的 (被大量工作等)忙得不可开交的,压倒的 - Do you think it's going to snow? (US)
Do you think it will snow? (UK) → 您觉得会下雪吗? - Is the road to ... covered with snow? (US)
Is the road to ... snowed up? (UK) → 去...的路上有积雪吗? - Do I need snow chains? → 我需要安装防滑链吗?
- What are the snow conditions? → 雪况如何?
- What is the snow like? → 雪况怎样?
snow
snowslang Cocaine. Hey man, can you score me some snow for this weekend? I dabbled a bit with snow when I was in college, but I mostly just stick to pot.snow1. n. deceitful talk; deception. All I heard for an hour was snow. Now, what’s the truth? 2. tv. to attempt to deceive someone. (see also snowed.) You can try to snow me if you want, but I’m onto your tricks. 3. and snowball and snowflakes and snow stuff n. a powdered or crystalline narcotic: morphine, heroin, or cocaine. (Now almost always the latter.) The price of snow stuff has come down a lot as South America exports more of it. snow stuff verbSee snowSee also: snow, stuffSee:- (as) white as snow
- a snow job
- be (as) pure as the driven snow
- be (as) white as snow
- be snowed out
- be snowed under
- do a snow job on (someone)
- do a snow job on someone
- get snowed
- have snow on the mountain
- have snow on the roof
- Lady Snow
- pure as the driven snow
- risk of (some inclement weather)
- roast snow in a furnace
- snow
- snow (one) under with (something)
- snow bunny
- snow in
- snow job
- snow on the mountain
- snow on the roof
- snow out
- snow stuff
- snow under
- snow under with
- snowball into (something)
- snowbird
- snowed
- snowed in
- snowed under
- white as a sheet
- white as snow
snow
snow, precipitation formed by the sublimation of water vapor into solid crystals at temperatures below freezing. Sublimation resulting in the formation of snow takes place about a dust particle, as in the formation of raindrops. Snowflakes form symmetrical (hexagonal) crystals, sometimes matted together if they descend through air warmer than that of the cloud in which they originated. Apparently, no two snow crystals are alike; they differ from each other in size, lacy structure, and surface markings. Snowfall, reduced to its liquid equivalent, is usually included in statistics on rainfall; the factors determining snowfall are similar to those affecting rainfall. On an average, 10 in. (25 cm) of snow is equivalent to 1 in. (2.5 cm) of rain. In the United States the average snowfall is about 28 in. (71 cm) per winter; the record is 1,140 in. (2,896 cm) at Mt. Baker in Washington state during the snow season of 1998–99. Snow that piles up on slopes may suddenly slide downward in an avalancheavalanche, rapidly descending large mass of snow, ice, soil, rock, or mixtures of these materials, sliding or falling in response to the force of gravity. Avalanches, which are natural forms of erosion and often seasonal, are usually classified by their content such as a debris ..... Click the link for more information. . A glacier consists of ice that was formed from compacted snow. Snow serves as an insulating blanket, lessening to some extent the extremes of temperature fluctuation to which the soil is subjected, but it also brings about a rapid cooling of the overlying atmosphere, giving rise to polar air massesair mass, large body of air within the earth's atmosphere in which temperature and humidity, although varying at different heights, remain similar throughout the body at any one height. ..... Click the link for more information. . Snow lessens loss of water by dormant plants. The sudden melting of snow is a primary cause of floods. Snow necessitates the building of snowsheds over rail lines and highways in certain mountain localities where a heavy fall is likely to impede travel; the use of snowplows to clear sidewalks, streets, and roads; the use of snow fences to prevent drifting over roads; and the use of skis, snowshoes, toboggans, snowmobiles, and sleds for travel. It is a primary factor in the location of winter sports centers and so has great economic value to certain areas. In some ski resorts machines are used to make artificial snow. As in the case of rainfall, snowfall has been produced artificially by introducing dry-ice pellets into supercooled clouds, that is, clouds containing unfrozen water droplets at temperatures below freezing.Snow frozen atmospheric precipitation falling from clouds in the form of flakes or ice crystals; the flakes or crystals are varied in shape but are basically hexagonal plates or hexahedral columns. The diameter of snowflakes varies from fractions of a millimeter to several millimeters. In calm weather at an atmospheric temperature of approximately 0°C, snowflakes may combine upon collision to form large flakes with diameters up to several centimeters. The average weight of individual snowflakes varies from 0.0001 g to 0.003 g; large snowflakes may weigh up to 0.2-0.5 g. At temperate and high latitudes, snow is the usual form of winter precipitation and forms a snow cover. The amount of fallen snow is measured with a precipitation gage. [23–1877–] What does it mean when you dream about snow?Because water is a natural symbol of emotional states, snow may indicate chilled and unexpressed emotions, either in the dreamer or in someone else. Naturally, a snowy landscape might simply be a part of the setting for dreamers living in the Snow Belt. snow[snō] (electronics) Small, random, white spots produced on a television or radar screen by inherent noise signals originating in the receiver. (meteorology) The most common form of frozen precipitation, usually flakes of starlike crystals, matted ice needles, or combinations, and often rime-coated. snowA type of water vapor that changes directly into crystals of ice flakes when frozen in the upper air. It is called snow flurries if the snow showers for a brief period and the snow is very light. It is called snow grains if the snow falls as small, white, opaque, flat or elongated grains of ice. With snow pellets, the precipitation is in the form of white, opaque, round or conical ice particles with a diameter of about 0.08 to 0.2 in. When on the ground, snow can be dry, wet, or compacted. Dry snow (specific gravity: up to but not including 0.35) can be blown if loose or, if compacted by hand, it will fall apart again upon release. Wet snow (specific gravity: 0.35 up to but not including 0.5), if compacted by hand, will stick together and tend to form a snowball. Compacted snow (specific gravity: 0.5 and over) has been compressed into a solid mass that resists further compression and will hold together or break up into lumps if picked up. On weather charts, snow is represented by the symbol *.snow“pure as the driven snow.” [Western Folklore: Misc.]See: Puritysnow1. precipitation from clouds in the form of flakes of ice crystals formed in the upper atmosphere 2. a layer of snowflakes on the ground 3. a fall of such precipitation 4. the random pattern of white spots on a television or radar screen, produced by noise in the receiver and occurring when the signal is weak or absent 5. Slang cocaine 6. See carbon dioxide snow
Snow C(harles) P(ercy), Baron. 1905--80, British novelist and physicist. His novels include the series Strangers and Brothers (1949--70) snowThe flickering snow-like spots on a video screen caused by display electronics that are too slow to respond to changing data.Snow (dreams)Snow symbolizes chilled and unexpressed emotions or emotions that have been repressed for an extended period of time. The snow in your dream suggests that you or someone else is emotionally cold, unresponsive, and indifferent. Clean, white snow may represent innocence, truth, peace, and relaxation. Virgin snow, as you may see it covering a beautiful landscape, may represent new beginnings or a new way of seeing things, and dirty snow may represent guilt. In literary works such as “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” and “For Whom the Bell Tolls, ” snow represents death.snow
car·bon di·ox·ide snowsolid carbon dioxide used in the treatment of warts, lupus, nevi, and other skin affections, and as a refrigerant. Synonym(s): dry iceDrug slang A popular street term for any pulverised whitish substance of abuse which can be snorted, classically cocaine, but also heroin, amphetamine, oxycodone, etc. Vox populi Cold crystallised white precipitationsnow Drug slang A street term for a pulverized substance of abuse which can be snorted, classically, cocaine, but also heroin, amphetamine, oxycodone, etcSee SNW
SNOW
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SNOW➣Supply-Chain Network Optimization Workbench | SNOW➣Simple Network of Workstations | SNOW➣Sound Nonviolent Opponents of War | SNOW➣Special Needs Opportunities Windows | SNOW➣Sparse Network of Winnows (learning software) | SNOW➣School Nurse Organization of Washington (Spokane Valley, WA) | SNOW➣Scalable Network of Workstations | SNOW➣Super Nerds Own the World (gaming clan) |
snow Related to snow: snow reportSynonyms for snownoun snowflakesSynonyms- snowflakes
- blizzard
- snowfall
- snowstorm
- sleet
- snowdrift
Synonyms for snownoun precipitation falling from clouds in the form of ice crystalsSynonymsRelated Words- downfall
- precipitation
- snow flurry
- flurry
- whiteout
- flake
- snowflake
noun a layer of snowflakes (white crystals of frozen water) covering the groundRelated Words- snowball
- layer
- flake
- snowflake
- corn snow
- crud
noun English writer of novels about moral dilemmas in academe (1905-1980)Synonyms- Baron Snow of Leicester
- C. P. Snow
- Charles Percy Snow
noun street names for cocaineSynonymsRelated Wordsverb fall as snowRelated Wordsverb conceal one's true motives from especially by elaborately feigning good intentions so as to gain an endSynonyms- bamboozle
- lead by the nose
- play false
- pull the wool over someone's eyes
- hoodwink
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