• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Home
  • About
    • About WHW
    • Press Kit
    • Resident Writing Coaches
    • Contact Us
    • Podcasts & Interviews
    • Master Storytelling Newsletter
    • Guest Post Guidelines
    • Privacy Policy
    • Charities & Support
  • Bookstore
    • Bookstore
    • Foreign Editions
    • Book Reviews
    • Free Thesaurus Sampler
  • Blog
  • Software
  • Workshops
  • Resources
    • List of Resources
    • Recommended Writing Books
    • WHW Descriptive Thesaurus Collection
    • Free Tools & Worksheets
    • Free Show-Dont-Tell Pro Pack
  • WRITERS HELPING WRITERS®
WRITERS HELPING WRITERS®

WRITERS HELPING WRITERS®

Helping writers become bestselling authors

Weather Thesaurus Entry: Snow

Published: December 8, 2011 by ANGELA ACKERMAN

WEATHER is an important element in any setting, providing sensory texture and contributing to the mood the writer wishes to create in a scene. With a deft touch, weather can enhance the character’s emotional response to a specific location, it can add conflict, and it can also (lightly) foreshadow coming events.

However, caution must accompany this entry: the weather should not be used as a window into a character’s soul. The weather can add invisible pressure for the character, it can layer the SCENE with symbolism, it can carefully hint at the internal landscape, but it must never OVERTLY TELL emotion. Such a heavy-handed approach results in weather cliches and melodrama (a storm raging above a bloody battle, a broken-hearted girl crying in the rain).

SENSORY DESCRIPTORS:

Sight: Flakes can range from small bits of ice to large lacy pieces that float at a slower speed. Depending on the wind direction and strength, snow can fall on an angle, slight to sharp, or even appear to fly sideways in extreme winter blows or blizzards. If flakes drift straight down, there is an absence of wind current. A stronger wind..

Smell: Snow has a crisp, ozone-like tang to it.

Taste: Most snow simply tastes like water, but it may carry a slightly bitter taste if in an urban area. However, often the taste is dulled due to the numbing of taste buds from the cold.

Touch: Snow varies from soft lacy flakes that melt the moment they touch exposed flesh to hard pellets that can sting chapped, wind-dried skin. Snow is extremely cold…For more information on how the body reacts to freezing elements, go here.

Sound: Snowfall is usually very quiet with the exception of wind being present, or if the snow is in pellet form. With our busy lives, if the conditions are right and a person were to stop and listen, the absence of sound seems remarkable. However, if wind is present it may howl, tree branches will shake…

EMOTIONAL TRIGGERS:

Mood: snowfall can lighten the mood and bring back childhood memories and pleasant experiences of playing in the snow and being outdoors on a cool, crisp day. Snow is widely viewed as a beautiful act of nature, and the slow, silent drift of flakes will often reach into a person and make them stop and take notice…

Symbolism: purity, renewal, frigidity, sleep…

 

Don’t be afraid to use the weather to add contrast. Unusual pairings, especially when drawing attention to the Character’s emotions, is a powerful trigger for tension. Consider how the bleak mood of a character is even more noticeable as morning sunlight dances across the crystals of fresh snow on the walk to work. Or how the feeling of betrayal is so much more poignant on a hot summer day. Likewise, success or joy can be hampered by a cutting wind or drizzling sleet, foreshadowing conflict to come. 

Weather is a powerful tool, helping to foreshadow events and steer the emotional mood of any scene.

Need more detail regarding this weather element? Good news! This thesaurus has been integrated into our new online library at One Stop For Writers. There, not only has the information in each entry been enhanced and expanded, we’ve also added scenarios for adding conflict and tension. The entire thesaurus is also cross-referenced with our many other descriptive collections for easy searchability. Registration is free, so if you’re interested in seeing a sampling of the fully updated Weather and Earthly Phenomenon Thesaurus, head on over to One Stop.

ANGELA ACKERMAN
ANGELA ACKERMAN

Angela is a writing coach, international speaker, and bestselling author who loves to travel, teach, empower writers, and pay-it-forward. She also is a founder of One Stop For Writers, a portal to powerful, innovative tools to help writers elevate their storytelling.

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • More
  • Click to print (Opens in new window)

Related

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Becca Puglisi says

    December 9, 2011 at 9:00 pm

    This post is really helpful, since I live in south Florida and haven’t seen snow in years. Yet my stories always have snow in them. Someone’s over-compensating…

  2. Traci Kenworth says

    December 9, 2011 at 8:40 am

    As I look out my window this morning I see this icky, white stuff. Lol. I will use this thesaurus for my story in the future, so I will no doubt return to this entry for clarification. Thanks!!

  3. Ruby Claire says

    December 9, 2011 at 7:54 am

    I love to feel snow during evening time.
    It gives me please of early morning.

    Feedback forms

  4. Leslie Rose says

    December 8, 2011 at 10:09 pm

    I love the hush of a snowfall. Jerry Spinelli has an awesome snowing sequence in LOSER.

  5. Carrie Butler says

    December 8, 2011 at 5:09 pm

    Nooo…not snow! I’m not ready!

    *grins* Okay, okay. I might be overreacting. Great post, as always!

  6. Mirka Breen says

    December 8, 2011 at 4:45 pm

    I heard snow referred to as ‘fluffy,’ but the real snow never fits this.
    The visual and the tactile of snow are jarringly different. The first is almost powder sugar or frosting, the second cold and unfriendly…
    Maybe I’ve been in California for too long.

  7. C.R. Evers says

    December 8, 2011 at 4:37 pm

    Yet another great list, and very wise words of caution as well.

    Great job guys!

  8. Heather says

    December 8, 2011 at 2:33 pm

    Context is the key indeed! You’ve given me some great things to think about where snow is concerned. Often it is only wonder or cold that writers associate it with. You’ve shown us there is so much more!

  9. Lenny Lee* says

    December 8, 2011 at 2:16 pm

    hi miss angela! hooray for snow!! ha ha. i like this post lots cause i got lots of weather and lots of snow in my wip. for sure this posts gonna make my story lots better. 🙂
    …hugs from lenny

  10. Tina Moss says

    December 8, 2011 at 12:06 pm

    Weather can play an active part in the scene, but you are so right when you say it can be overdone. Avoiding cliches about snow sparkling, or cliches of anytime when discussing weather, is important. It’ll take away from the mood rather than adding to it.

  11. Loree Huebner says

    December 8, 2011 at 11:35 am

    I love the powdery snow. When it comes down, it’s slow and gentle – just like you’re in a snow globe.

    Great post.

  12. Angela Ackerman says

    December 8, 2011 at 10:54 am

    Excellent add, Jeff–I totally forgot about the varying density of snowfall, and you’re absolutely right! Thanks for chiming in. 🙂

  13. JeffO says

    December 8, 2011 at 9:41 am

    A rather appropriate entry, given that we just had about two inches of snow fall during the night. It’s been unusually snow-free so far this year for these parts.

    I’d like to add one thing: depending on where you are, and air/temperature conditions, snow may be wet and heavy, or light and almost fluffy. This morning’s snow was very wet. The 2″ I had to clear off the car was sticky and heavier than normal. Once winter really gets going where I live, you can pick up 8 or 10 inches on a shovel with comparatively little effort, or even use a broom to push it away with relative ease. Those wet snowflakes often fall almost like rain drops.

Primary Sidebar


Welcome!

Writing is hard. Angela & Becca make it easier. Get ready to level up your fiction with game-changing tools, resources, and advice.

Subscribe to the Blog

Check your inbox to confirm! If gremlins tried to eat it, you might have to check your spam folder.

Find it Fast

Read by Category

Grab Our Button

Writers Helping Writers

Software that Will Change the Writing Game

One Stop for Writers

Join our Writers Helping Writers Newsletter

NO AI TRAINING: Any use of this content to “train” generative artificial intelligence (AI) technologies to generate text is expressly prohibited. The legal copyright holder, Writers Helping Writers®, reserves all rights to license uses of this work for generative AI training and development of machine learning language models. WRITERS HELPING WRITERS® · Copyright © 2025 · WEBSITE DESIGN BY LAUGH EAT LEARN