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snowbound

[ UK /snˈə‍ʊba‍ʊnd/ ]
[ US /ˈsnoʊˌbaʊnd/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. confined or shut in by heavy snow

How To Use snowbound In A Sentence

  • I really don't want to be snowbound here until tomorrow…
  • These little puff pastries are served on a white napkin with bowls of chocolate sauce and raspberry coulis for dipping, and they're as close as you'll get, in snowbound Manhattan, to a taste of the real thing.
  • Living in a nowhere rural town in snowbound Montana, he appears ready to break himself.
  • A writer-caretaker who, snowbound in this sepulchral hell, eventually loses it, his descent into madness is displayed through the most perversely witty of character arcs.
  • Hundreds of vehicles have become snowbound and police are warning people not to travel on this stretch of the motorway.
  • And, if you've got some time to kill at work (or if you're snowbound like us Washingtonians), take a tour of the Framley Museum.
  • Years later, while snowbound in his Canadian home-in-exile with only the odd visits from the local librarian for company, he is dispassionate about the moral choices he's made.
  • Although most of North Yorkshire was snowbound Sandhill Lane provided a welcome island of green.
  • To fulfill this anticipation, you'll cross a number of differing terrains, including deserts, snowbound mountain passes and fetid swampland, gathering a number of companions along the way.
  • Returning to his gloomy snowbound field headquarters he had to face some nasty facts.
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