Here are a few names meaning snow-
Name - XueOrigin- Chinese
Name- YukiOrigin- Japanese (Yuki can also mean lucky)
Name- NevadaOrigin- Spanish(Name is not snow but, covered in snow or as white as snow)
Name-EiraOrigin- Welsh
Name-TuyetOrigin-Vietnamese (Snow White)
Name-MiyukiOrigin- Japanese(Silent snow; beautiful happiness)
I hope this helps, if you were looking for English names I couldn't really find any most of the English names don't have meanings.
The word goes back to at least the 10th Century in English, as snāw, itself from Old English. There are similar words in Danish and other Germanic languages from that period. I'm afraid no one remembers who named it.
Yuki means snow, so I would say a girl whose name is Yukiko, meaning 'snow child.' Typically Japanese girls' names end with -ko (child).
Frosty
There are many street names for cocaine, but the major ones range from blow, powder, candy, snow, white, to yey/yeyo.
The common names are ice or snow.
I read on that it means Silence of deep snow.
Edur, Eira, Yuki, Aneira, Crystal, and Nieve. Source: uk.answers.yahoo.com.
The word goes back to at least the 10th Century in English, as snāw, itself from Old English. There are similar words in Danish and other Germanic languages from that period. I'm afraid no one remembers who named it.
No moxie girls snow is not toxic They are not safe however Moxie snow can be fatal if inhaled or ingested by a child
Yuki means snow, so I would say a girl whose name is Yukiko, meaning 'snow child.' Typically Japanese girls' names end with -ko (child).
there is no way to make snow girls in animal crossing! however, you can make snowmen
You can't only snow men. Bezzie Jezzie
Yes. Nieves does mean snow.
Snow white did not guess doc and bashful!
Snow-clad; snow-covered.
Their livelihood once depended on the snow and the seals, so they developed a precise vocabulary to deal with it. Knowing the difference between, say, wet snow and snow floating on water could mean life or death.
Snow is known by different names in various cultures around the world. For example, in Japan, it is called "yuki," in Russia it is known as "sneg," and in Iceland, it is referred to as "snjr." These are just a few examples of the diverse names for snow across different cultures.