Friday, 21 November 2025

Friday 21st November - snow and Debussy

Snow, or sort of snow, or nearly snow, or lots of snow... most of us will have had some sort of snow.

As far as I know we only gave a few words for snow in English, but according to the BBC the Scots have 421! When I spent a few seconds researching 'number of words for snow' just now, I wasn't expecting this. Here are a few examples;

  • feefle - to swirl

  • flindrikin - a slight snow shower

  • snaw-pouther - fine driving snow

  • spitters - small drops or flakes of wind-driven rain or snow

  • unbrak - the beginning of a thaw

  • sneesl - just beginning to snow or sleet

  • skelf - a large snowflake

  • Well, I can tell you that when that sneesl came on Wednesday morning, the snow fell in large wet skelfs after about half an hour of spitters.


  • Debussy (another scavenger hunt find!) has a couple of snow pieces.


  • The Snow Is Dancing from Children's Corner played by Seong-Jin Cho



  • Des Pas Sur La Neige from Préludes book 1 played by Daniel Baremboim








2 comments:

  1. When I hear words from other languages, I wonder why English seems relatively impoverished. Perhaps it's just the novelty that appeals and the way unfamiliar words feel in the mouth.

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    1. The word sneesl is reminiscent of Dutch and German. I th8nk English is a relatively rich language, because of the influences from all over thecworld. But I wonder a lot of our Norse words were lost when French became a court language (although we gained those new words). I think the old words like byre and midden only outside the world of polite society.

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