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Snow Idioms

8 Snow Idioms

Snow Idioms and What They Mean

Snow idioms help us talk about being busy, innocent, tricky, or how things grow quickly. These phrases use snow to show feelings, actions, and situations in fun and clear ways. Here are 8 snow idioms, what they mean, and how to use them.

Snowed under

Very busy with work or tasks.

Snowed under with homework this week.
She’s snowed under at her job and needs help.

A snowball effect

When something small grows bigger and faster.

His anger had a snowball effect—it just got worse.
One small mistake caused a snowball effect of problems.

A snowball’s chance in hell

No chance at all.

They have a snowball’s chance in hell of winning.
I had a snowball’s chance in hell of getting that job.

Break the ice

To start a conversation or make people feel more comfortable.

He told a joke to break the ice.
We played a game to break the ice on the first day.

Pure as the driven snow

Very innocent or morally good.

She looks pure as the driven snow, but she can be sneaky.
He acts like he’s pure as the driven snow, but no one’s perfect.

To snow someone

To trick or fool someone by talking too much or too nicely.

He tried to snow me with a lot of fake compliments.
Don’t let the salesman snow you—ask for the facts.

Snow job

A lie or trick to make someone believe something.

The ad was just a snow job—the product didn’t work.
He gave me a snow job about why he was late.

Cold as snow

Very cold in temperature or personality.

Her hands were cold as snow after walking outside.
He was cold as snow and didn’t show any emotion.

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