The snow is so deep we will be forced to start eating non-essential parts of our house guests.
I had to walk fifteen miles uphill both ways, in snow five feet deep.
The snow is so deep that it reached the Earth's core. The snow is so deep it was a part of the ocean. The snow was so deep that it was full of gasoline.
The snow is so deep we will be forced to start eating non-essential parts of our house guests.
The snow was piled higher than the Himalayas; we would need Sherpas to guide us.
No, a hyperbole is an exaggeration for effect, like I could sleep for a year.
You have to look in the snow. Deep in the snoww he should be there.
A hyperbole would be saying something like "There's enough snow here to reach the sky!" to exaggerate the size of the snow pile in a dramatic or humorous way.
The snow was piled higher than the Himalayas; we would need Sherpas to guide us.
its subject
you all should get the xbox one.
The snow was piled higher than the Himalayas; we would need Sherpas to guide us.
In usual text, snow-covered would probably be hyphenated - otherwise the sentence could be misinterpreted - consider the difference between the concept of "snow-covered mountains" and the sentence "snow covered mountains".