How to Use snowdrift in a Sentence

snowdrift

noun
  • The car was almost buried in a snowdrift.
  • Like the train in Christie’s novel which gets stalled in a snowdrift, this is a project that could easily go off the rails.
    Mary Carole McCauley, baltimoresun.com, 29 Aug. 2019
  • The road had one to five foot snowdrifts this weekend, and temperatures overnight were in the 20s.
    Carina Julig, The Denver Post, 24 June 2019
  • The road had up to five-foot snowdrifts this weekend, and temperatures overnight were in the 20s.
    Carina Julig, The Denver Post, 25 June 2019
  • Roughly 650 feet from the beach, a large white shape moves in the shadows between the post office and a snowdrift as high as a house.
    Eva Holland, Smithsonian, 16 May 2018
  • The ice and snow didn’t help, putting him on his back frequently, and his shouts were muffled by the snowdrifts and the pane of my window.
    Aaron Gilbreath, Longreads, 11 May 2018
  • The blizzard of 1873 left snowdrifts a dozen feet high on some Indiana farms.
    Patt Morrison, Los Angeles Times, 10 Aug. 2023
  • Winds of more than 45 mph created snowdrifts as tall as 10 feet.
    Meg Jones, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 9 Jan. 2020
  • Because the main road through town tends to fill in with tall, impassable snowdrifts, the windswept beach is also a route that the village kids take to and from school.
    Eva Holland, Smithsonian, 16 May 2018
  • Heavier rains, bigger tornados, deeper snowdrifts and then in some places, no doubt, worse droughts and fires and all the rest.
    Erik Kain, Forbes, 22 Feb. 2023
  • Just after midnight, a snowdrift stops the Orient Express in its tracks.
    The Courier-Journal, 5 Nov. 2022
  • On Sunday, the bear attempted to dig itself out of the hole, only to become wedged between the snowdrifts.
    Isabella Rosario, Outside Online, 8 Feb. 2023
  • The sun was setting, and Casey Ryan was exhausted after trying to dig his pickup truck out of a snowdrift.
    Daniel Wu, Washington Post, 13 Mar. 2023
  • In another scene, a group of doormen push white snowdrifts across the stage, then raise their shovels in the air to simulate the shape of Central Park’s Bow Bridge.
    Ingrid Abramovitch, ELLE Decor, 7 June 2023
  • Rain then morphed into macadamia-nut-sized hail that pelted the stadium, leaving what looked like foot-high snowdrifts on the floor of each dugout.
    Mike Digiovanna, Los Angeles Times, 30 June 2023
  • On December 28, Scott’s body was found by a volunteer search party, buried in a snowdrift.
    Eric Ogden, Marie Claire, 10 June 2019
  • Like other homeowners in the towns near Lake Tahoe, Mr. Culp was racing to remove massive snowdrifts from his roof.
    Eliza Fawcett, New York Times, 9 Mar. 2023
  • Sprinkled with powdered sugar, these fudgy chocolate cookies look like they got caught in a snowdrift.
    April Franzino, Woman's Day, 15 Dec. 2022
  • Patches of snow are frequent, with the longest snowfield about 200 feet, with snowdrifts in spots as high as 5 feet, that hikers are detouring around.
    Tom Stienstra, SFChronicle.com, 17 July 2019
  • One opponent’s gym was so small a guy driving for a layup stumbled and fell through an outside door behind the basket into a snowdrift.
    Bob Hill, The Courier-Journal, 7 Mar. 2022
  • The narrative arc of the sisters’ journey north is buried in whole snowdrifts of backstory about the past colonial sins of Anna and Elsa’s frosty kingdom.
    David Sims, The Atlantic, 14 Nov. 2019
  • Water penetrated deep into the soil of Western forests, and mammoth snowdrifts stacked up across the Sierra Nevadas.
    Robinson Meyer, The Atlantic, 7 Sep. 2017
  • Hours later, Syta got a frantic call from her mother after she’d been trapped in a snowdrift for several hours.
    Brianna Sacks and Emily Wax-Thibodeaux, Anchorage Daily News, 27 Dec. 2022
  • Use safeguards and properly ventilate when using heat from a fireplace, space heater or wood stove and make sure gas furnaces are not blocked by a snowdrift.
    Julia Musto, Fox News, 26 Oct. 2021
  • The Associated Press reported at the time that rescue workers dug through snowdrifts in the village of Skeklab for two days only to find 18 frozen bodies.
    Fox News, 7 Feb. 2020
  • Moscow earlier this month saw what has been described as the strongest snowfall on record when more than a month's average of snow fell on the city, turning streets and yards into snowdrifts.
    Bloomberg.com, 26 Feb. 2018
  • The Abruzzo region has been hit by severe winter weather in recent weeks, leading to snowdrifts 16-feet deep, heightening the risk of avalanches.
    Sebastian Modak, Condé Nast Traveler, 19 Jan. 2017
  • The poems are banked impressions, like snowdrifts after a blizzard, or deposits left by a receding tide.
    Dan Chiasson, The New Yorker, 4 Nov. 2019
  • The storm dropped visibility to near zero and resulted in power outages and snowdrifts as high as 8 feet.
    Jason Samenow, Washington Post, 1 May 2017
  • Winter snowdrifts accumulate into massive glacier-looking faces of compact snow right to the water's edge, running on for miles or as far as our eyes could see.
    Bjorn Olson, Alaska Dispatch News, 30 July 2017

Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'snowdrift.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.

Last Updated: