Precipatation.
Two examples of solid water are ice cubes and snowflakes.
QUALITY!For example: The quality of the snow is very dry, making the snow easy and difficult to pack!
Wind is a non-example of precipitation. Precipitation refers to water falling from the sky in the form of rain, snow, sleet, or hail, whereas wind is the movement of air around the Earth.
It depends on how much you have!! One shovelful of snow, for example, weighs less than the amount of snow on your driveway. I suspect what you are really asking is not how much snow weighs but how much it weighs per cubit foot or cubic yard. Weight per unit volume is called density. But even that is tricky with respect to snow. The density of snow varies greatly. Lightly packed powder weighs very little per cubic foot, whereas slushy, wet snow can weigh over 62 pounds per cubic foot -- about the density of water.
Snow leopards are loners and never in a group.
'As white as snow' is a simile.
Snow is a noun in that example.
A snow globe. The "snow" will mix with the water, but it will eventually settle out at the bottom.
Ice And Snow
No it is not .
Skiing instructors: they teach skiing to people when there is snow, when the snow is gone, there job is lost
snow leopared
rain, sleet, snow, hail
white as snow
Crow: Death; Hemlock Tree: Poisness Tree;
a physical change
generalism FOR NOVANEt