1Aweel, sir, if ye maun gae.-There'llbe snaw the night, I'm thinking!
2The lassie had nae liking for the unmannerly wind and snaw of Edinburgh.
3I have been in far deeper snaw whiles, following the sheep-
4The plain was snaw-white when ye began y'r bit nappie.
5Little sleep will they get if the snaw begins to drift in the hollows!
6It was my son, gooin afther th' lambs i' the snaw, as found him.
7It's coomin' on to snaw, an it'll snaw aw neet.
8She's smoored i' the snaw by this time.
9On-ding o' snaw,-ay ,that'sthe word,-on-ding-"He was now at his own door, "Castle Street, No.
10Ye wad either be blawn ower the muir like a feather, or planted amang the snaw like Lot's wife.
11To my moind, a sight o' more snaw is a-coomin'; and what mah sard or goon foight again it?
12Most of us have been like him, and have found pleasure in wading Tweed, for example, when chill with snaw-bree.
13But ye dinna ken what it would be like never to have put your foot in the snaw all your life.
14Your locks are like the snaw;
15Patsy had been teaching her companion such phrases as "a blatter o' sleet," an "on-ding o' snaw," and a "thresh o' rain."
16"Aye-it'sonding o' snaw- "saidthe shepherd, his shrewd blue eyes travelling over her face and form.