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Discover Ludwig"snow under" is a perfectly valid phrase in written English.
It is used to describe a situation in which someone is overwhelmed by a large amount of work or responsibility. For example, "With all the assignments I have this week, I'm feeling a bit snowed under."
Dictionary
snow under
verb
To overwhelm (with large quantities of something to be dealt with).
Exact(37)
Yellow drops stained the snow under his feet.
The white of a fresh snow under a blue sky?
"The child was slipping on the snow under the bus," he said.
There isn't a person in sight, just me and the hiss of snow under my skis.
Neighbors were clearing snow under other people's cars and playing with other people's children.
I love the way he jogs through the snow under indictment, like a stork in spandex trying to gallop.
Similar(23)
If we had included photographs, the sounds would have been snowed under", wrote Professor Planqué in email.
As a typically snowed-under PhD student, Harry was at home, spending the afternoon with nothing more exciting than a pile of undergraduate marking.
Tobias Campbell shoots and edits Noan Chenfeld's video "I'm Just A Soul" just like a pro, employing the teen singer-songwriter's emotional delivery and bipedalism to make use of Central Park's beautiful snowed-under bleakness.
Snow will blow under the building to form a meteorlike tail 1,000 feet behind the station.
I've got 17 friends... I'm snowed under".
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com