Snows
[snəuz]
Examples
- Some weeks before this period I had procured a sledge and dogs, and thus traversed the snows with inconceivable speed. Mary Shelley. Frankenstein_Or_The Modern Prometheus.
- Yet two or three weeks, at most, and we shall be left to the winter snows. Charles Dickens. Little Dorrit.
- They drifted northward as the snows melted for summer pasture, and southward to winter pasture after the custom of the steppes. H. G. Wells. The Outline of History_Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind.
- What kind of a country is it where it snows in May? Hemingway, Ernest. For Whom The Bell Tolls.
- No; Taygeta haunts those hills, and if I wandered upward to the snows I would meet her. Fergus Hume. The Island of Fantasy.
- If it snows it snows. Hemingway, Ernest. For Whom The Bell Tolls.
- Snows, does it? Charles Dickens. The Pickwick Papers.
- What kind of country is this where it snows when it is almost June? Hemingway, Ernest. For Whom The Bell Tolls.
- This lake comes from the snows yonder. Fergus Hume. The Island of Fantasy.
- Going to another extreme, we find Edison grappling with one of the biggest problems known to the authorities of New York--the disposal of its heavy snows. Frank Lewis Dyer. Edison, His Life and Inventions.
- Spring drew on: she was indeed already come; the frosts of winter had ceased; its snows were melted, its cutting winds ameliorated. Charlotte Bronte. Jane Eyre.
- As I still pursued my journey to the northward, the snows thickened, and the cold increased in a degree almost too severe to support. Mary Shelley. Frankenstein_Or_The Modern Prometheus.
- The snows descended on my head, and I saw the print of his huge step on the white plain. Mary Shelley. Frankenstein_Or_The Modern Prometheus.
Typist: Loretta