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Discover LudwigThe phrase "snow bank" is correct and commonly used in written English.
It is used to refer to a large mound or pile of snow, typically found on the side of roads or in areas where snow has been plowed or shoveled. Example: "The car skidded off the road and crashed into a snow bank, narrowly avoiding a collision with a tree."
Exact(60)
Shortly before reaching the Wilson home, their car careened into a snow bank.
They looked at me and at one another and suddenly lifted me over the snow bank!
"I figured if I got stuck in a snow bank people could find me," she said.
In the snow bank behind their camping spot, they built their own latrine.
In his mind he saw Lillian lying in a snow bank.
Sometimes we'd miss a turn and sail over a snow bank, landing on the other side in fits of laughter.
If you can find one that is not stranded in a snow bank, expect a long crawl to your destination.
But before I can race down the snow bank, I watch Frankie lean down to pick up the sled.
Mr. Nanni got in the truck, drove a few blocks, found parking next to a snow bank and disappeared inside the preschool.
As your eyes adjust to the darkness, the rectangle first suggests a chalk-smeared blackboard, then gently roiled white mist and, up close, a snow bank in twilight.
"On an empty mountain road, the car skidded on a patch of ice and veered into a snow bank," he recalled.
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