17 Metaphors for frost

De frost is fallin' on de gras' An' seem to say "Dis is yo' las'" De air is blowin' mighty cold Like it done in days of old.

The season of 1896 was one of the worst ever known on some may-fly rivers; probably the great frost two winters back was the cause of failure.

Hoar-frost, such as we find on our window-panes, or on the grass, is the moisture of the warm air cooled down and frozen, and is produced when the cold at the surface is below the freezing-point.

"You think that Dr. Frost and my brother and I are mere creatures of your fancy?" The candles did not give a great light.

The sharp frost is so far an advantage to the tenant of meadow land that he can cart manure without cutting and poaching the turf, and even without changing the ordinary for the extra set of broad-wheels on the cart.

The "philosophy of Thomas" is inscrutable, but no doubt he derives satisfaction from comparisons: If we're standin' in two foot o' water, you see Quite likely the Boches are standin' in three; An' though the keen frost may be ticklin' our toes, 'Oo doubts that the Boches' 'ole bodies is froze?

Or rather, the ploughshare is but concealed; since a pithy old English preacher has said that, "the frost is God's plough, which He drives through every inch of ground in the world, opening each clod, and pulverizing the whole.

The frosts were her condition; The Tyrian would not come Until the North evoked it.

However, I knew that my face, bound up as my head was, would hardly become familiar to him in a short time, and I risked saying that I understood that Dr. Frost had been orderly-sergeant in some company or other.

What mischief did he do in the cupboard, and why? Is Jack Frost an artist?

" GEORGE W. FROST, San Diego, Calif.:"You and 'Jim' White, George Wright, Barnes, McVey, O'Rourke, etc., were little gods to us back there in Boston in those days of '74 and '75, and I recall how indignant we were when you 'threw us down' for the Chicago contract.

SEE FROST, S. E., JR., ed. COPELAND, EDITH J. Kendall of the Picayune: being his adventures in New Orleans, on the Texan Santa Fe expedition, in the Mexican War, and in the colonization of the Texas frontier.

Besides, I knew that Dr. Frost had never been my teacher.

Jack Frost, Jacks Again, Liffey, Barton Wonder, Barton Marvel, and several other good ones, were inmates of this kennel, the two latter especially being high-class terriers, which at one time were owned by Sir H. de Trafford.

"Jack Frost" and "The Winter King" have long been favorites.

A late frost destroying the freshness of its early verdure, may be the means of a richer growth in later and more favourable days.

To a man at work, the frost is but a color; the rain, the wind, he forgot them when he came in.

17 Metaphors for  frost