snowageddon
English
Etymology
Blend of snow + Armageddon.[1]
Noun
snowageddon (plural snowageddons)
- Alternative form of Snowmageddon.
- 2016 January 1, Leonid E. Grinin, Ilya V. Ilyin, Peter Herrmann, Andrey V. Korotayev, Globalistics and globalization studies: Global Transformations and Global Future.[2], ООО "Издательство "Учитель", →ISBN, page 223:
- snowageddon = snow + Armageddon
- 2020 August 7, Tracey Alvarez, Stewart Island: The Complete Series[3], Icon Publishing Limited, →ISBN:
- Then there was Arnold Peterson, who trapped her with a monologue about digestive problems, Larry Chapman, who continually farted and blamed an invisible dog, and Sully, her friend's husband, who complained about his wife's knitting addiction—"I counted twenty-two scarves, fourteen jerseys, twelve pairs of gloves, and ten knee rugs. Is the woman expecting snowageddon next winter?" Sully was the best of a bad bunch, but Betsy didn't think he was looking for a little on the side considering June was always complaining in return that her husband's libido was probably stashed in the garden shed under a pile of power tools he didn't really know how to use.
- 2022 September 7, Patti Larsen, Family Enterprise and Death[4], volume 7, Patti Larsen Books, →ISBN:
- Still, as I tromped down the street with Daisy, following a small trail of others who made their way over the icy sidewalks toward The Orange under the big moon just visible past the giant bank of clouds portending snowageddon, this wasn't the newlywed (yes, more than twelve months out, but still) lifestyle I'd signed up for when we'd said I do a little over a year ago.
References
- “snowageddon”, in OneLook Dictionary Search.
- ^ Olga Kornienko, Grinin L, Ilyin I, Herrmann P, Korotayev A (2016), “Social and Economic Background of Blending”, in Globalistics and Globalization Studies: Global Transformations and Global Future[1], Volgograd: Uchitel Publishing House, →ISBN, pages 220–225