The ambulance body was snowed under somewhere and nowhere in sight.
It was the blizzard of 1888, when we were snowed in.
I have a picture of one car almost snowed under, for the snow was fully six feet deep.
Then, as it is all dark, we are glad to huddle in anywhere, and many of us get snowed up, and never see the glad sunshine any more.
I found myself at last by the foot of a very tall hummock, composed, I daresay, of bay-ice squeezed up at some time or other and finally snowed over.
This was pleasant, as the probability of being snowed up was no longer to be apprehended, but the biting cold was terrible, and I knew that if I succumbed to sleep, I would be frost-bitten.
For a fortnight we had been completely snowed up at Mesopotamia.
For the four days during which we were detained at this station it rained, sleeted, and snowed alternately and unceasingly.
During the time we were snowed up the mob of horses came almost every day to the stock yard for rock salt and we now took the opportunity to retain three, as the ground was clear enough for riding.
I only hope you won't get snowed in anywhere between here and Harding.
The office boy is stuck in the drifts over in Brooklyn, and my assistant and the stenographer are snowed up in Harlem.
He dashed the tree down in front of Kaviak, and a sudden storm agitated its sturdy branches; it snowed about the floor, and the strange fruit whirled and spun in the blast.
Two of the Trio sided against the odd man, Potts, and turned him out of the Little Cabin one night during a furious snowstorm, that had already lasted two days, had more than half buried the hut, and nearly snowedup the little doorway.
These last few days up here must be given over to Nature as she is snowed under!
Relentlessly it blew and snowed and the gales were almost unbreastable.
After that they had fun and adventures on Star Island, they were snowed in, as the book of that name tells, and later they went to Uncle Frank's ranch in the West.
I thought I was snowed up, and I have never signed that codicil about little Viola, or I could die easily.
Snowed up they were, undoubtedly; so thoroughly snowed up that there was not a ray of daylight within their dwelling.
After we were across the main divide I told them there would be no danger of being snowed in now.
The plain fact is this: we're snowed up, and what's more the side-car wheel has gone to pot at last.
I started it snowed slightly, but not enough to induce me to stop, as I hoped it would cease with daylight.
After four o'clock it snowed so heavily that the accumulation of fresh snow soon amounted to several feet, and we sank above the knee at every step.
This stream, which is probably at least as large as the Nubra river, has its source in heavily-snowed mountains to the north.
One Christmas vacation we got snowed in and the fellow who owned the dog came after us in a truck.
The day I left Rochester it snowed two feet and I had to shovel snow for hours to get my car out.
You might find it fun to be snowed up in camp during a first fall, and to tramp homewards through a thawing slush.
III It snowed all night, and in the morning the guide refused to continue the journey, the weather being in his opinion not fit even for a dog to go out in.
The snow now lay six inches deep on the level; it had snowed all night and was snowing still.
They didn't know Mrs. Watson's house was snowed up so.
But it was hard work; every little while the tears would come into my eyes, to think of my dear father and mother at home, not knowing how we weresnowed up in the little red farmhouse.
And it snowed on till it had covered all the ground; covered all the hay up to the top; covered over the heads of the labourers and their masters; snowed so deep that the sun has never been able to melt it away again!
Day after day a clean sky threw the jagged peaks into violent relief, and high lights snowed their Matterhorn, until a sidelong sunset picked the whole chain out with shadows like falls of ink.
It was nevertheless hard going in our valley, where the duck-boards were snowed under for long stretches without a break, and warmer work in my fleece lining than I had known it yet.
When I said traveller, I meant a man who goes tramping across Africa, and shoots elephants, and gets snowed up at the North Pole, and has all sorts of uncomfortable and quite incredible adventures.
Tain't in reason as you can go up to every old gentleman with a brown face as you never see before an' ask him if he's ever been snowed up at the North Pole and why he hasn't got a wooden leg.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "snowed" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.