Word Meanings - SNOWSTORM - Book Publishers vocabulary database
A storm with falling snow.
Related words: (words related to SNOWSTORM)
- FALLALS; FAL-LALS
Gay ornaments; frippery; gewgaws. Thackeray. - FALLER
A part which acts by falling, as a stamp in a fulling mill, or the device in a spinning machine to arrest motion when a thread breaks. (more info) 1. One who, or that which, falls. - FALLOW
Left untilled or unsowed after plowing; uncultivated; as, fallow ground. Fallow chat, Fallow finch , a small European bird, the wheatear . See Wheatear. (more info) vaal fallow, faded, OHG. falo, G. falb, fahl, Icel. fölr, and prob. to Lith. - STORMING
from Storm, v. Storming party , a party assigned to the duty of making the first assault in storming a fortress. - FALLOPIAN
Pertaining to, or discovered by, Fallopius; as, the Fallopian tubes or oviducts, the ducts or canals which conduct the ova from the ovaries to the uterus. - STORMGLASS
A glass vessel, usually cylindrical, filled with a solution which is sensitive to atmospheric changes, indicating by a clouded appearance, rain, snow, etc., and by clearness, fair weather. - STORM
A violent assault on a fortified place; a furious attempt of troops to enter and take a fortified place by scaling the walls, forcing the gates, or the like. Note: Storm is often used in the formation of self-explained compounds; as, storm-presaging, - FALLENCY
An exception. Jer. Taylor. - FALLEN
Dropped; prostrate; degraded; ruined; decreased; dead. Some ruined temple or fallen monument. Rogers. - FALLFISH
A fresh-water fish of the United States ; - - called also silver chub, and Shiner. The name is also applied to other allied species. - FALLING
from Fall, v. i. Falling away, Falling off, etc. See To fall away, To fall off, etc., under Fall, v. i. -- Falling band, the plain, broad, linen collar turning down over the doublet, worn in the early part of the 17th century. -- Falling sickness - STORMINESS
The state of being stormy; tempestuousness; biosteruousness; impetuousness. - FALLIBLY
In a fallible manner. - FALLAX
Cavillation; a caviling. Cranmer. - STORMILY
In a stormy manner. - STORM-BEAT
Beaten, injured, or impaired by storms. Spenser. - FALLOWNESS
A well or opening, through the successive floors of a warehouse or manufactory, through which goods are raised or lowered. Bartlett. - STORMWIND
A heavy wind; a wind that brings a storm; the blast of a storm. Longfellow. - STORMFINCH
The storm petrel. - FALLACIOUS
Embodying or pertaining to a fallacy; illogical; fitted to deceive; misleading; delusive; as, fallacious arguments or reasoning. -- Fal*la"cious*ly, adv. -Fal*la"cious*ness, n. - THRYFALLOW
To plow for the third time in summer; to trifallow. Tusser. - UNFALLIBLE
Infallible. Shak. - MISFALL
To befall, as ill luck; to happen to unluckily. Chaucer. - BEFALL
To happen to. I beseech your grace that I may know The worst that may befall me. Shak. - INFALLIBLY
In an infallible manner; certainly; unfailingly; unerringly. Blair. - RAINFALL
A fall or descent of rain; the water, or amount of water, that falls in rain; as, the average annual rainfall of a region. Supplied by the rainfall of the outer ranges of Sinchul and Singaleleh. Hooker. - JAW-FALLEN
Dejected; chopfallen. - CRESTFALLEN
1. With hanging head; hence, dispirited; dejected; cowed. Let it make thee crestfullen; Ay, and allay this thy abortive pride. Shak. 2. Having the crest, or upper part of the neck, hanging to one side; -- said of a horse. - PITFALLING
Entrapping; insnaring. "Full of . . . contradiction and pitfalling dispenses." Milton. - TRIFALLOW
To plow the third time before sowing, as land. Mortimer. - DOWNFALLEN
Fallen; ruined. Carew.