Snow that has been moved by wind and collected into snowdrifts. Snow that has just fallen from the sky is considered to be pure and untouched, as in the phrase 'pure as driven snow'; meaning totally pure, untouched, morally chaste.
No rain, sleet, or hail... just snow.
what is metricdriven environment
Drifts can mean a lot of snow
Of course it will! It's december, the season known for snow!It will snow somewhere undoubtedly. However December does not mean snow everywhere, in the southern hemisphere it is summer.
you mean sleet?
The phrase pure as the driven snow means extremely or totally pure. Shakespeare used snow as a symbol for purity. When snow first falls, driven snow, there is nothing wrong with it such as dirt, animal tracks, or leaves, which makes it pure.
Driven snow
the correct phrase is pure as the driven snowIt means entirely pure.OriginThe complete phrase 'as pure as the driven snow' doesn't appear in that form in any of Shakespeare's writing, but it almost does and he used snow as a symbol for purity and whiteness in several plays. In The Winter's Tale, 1611:Autolycus: Lawn as white as driven snow.In Macbeth, 1605:Malcolm: Black Macbeth will seem as pure as snow.
The Mentalist - 2008 White as the Driven Snow 6-15 was released on: USA: 23 March 2014
Snowdrifts are a mound or bank of snow driven together by the wind.
Ski-doo
Yes. Nieves does mean snow.
Snow-clad; snow-covered.
It can be, to mean inspired, enthusiastic (a driven competitor). Driven is the past tense and past participle of the verb to drive, and can be a verb or adjective.
The part of a mortar extending from the chamber to the trunnions., Hail or snow, mingled with rain, usually falling, or driven by the wind, in fine particles., To snow or hail with a mixture of rain.
snow is in winter
a lot of snow