How to Use snowblower in a Sentence
snowblower
noun-
This tells you how wide of a path the snowblower can clear in one pass.
—Bobbi Dempsey, Popular Mechanics, 27 Jan. 2023
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The width tells you how wide of a path the snowblower can clear in one pass.
—Bobbi Dempsey, Popular Mechanics, 14 Dec. 2022
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Not in the bread-and-milk/gas up the snowblower/make sure the oil tank is full sense.
—Nestor Ramos, BostonGlobe.com, 12 Mar. 2018
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Don’t put away those shovels, snowblowers, and bags of salt just yet.
—Martin Finucane, BostonGlobe.com, 15 Mar. 2018
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At one point he was doused head to toe by a discharging snowblower.
—Alexander Saeedy, WSJ, 29 Jan. 2022
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Salt and snowblowers are currently sold out at the store.
—Nikki Dementri, CBS News, 21 Jan. 2026
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Later, Suarez said a friend of his had a snowblower that needed to be fixed.
—Carl Weiser, Cincinnati.com, 1 Mar. 2018
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Best bet is to go slow or pay a neighborhood kid or someone with a snowblower to help you out.
—Joe Dwinell, Boston Herald, 23 Feb. 2026
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The smell of winter to me is a leaky two-stroke John Deere snowblower.
—James Lynch, Popular Mechanics, 3 Dec. 2018
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Fans drive plows, shovel, use snowblowers, spread salt and, in many cases, scoop up the snow with their bare hands.
—Jalen Wright, New York Times, 20 Jan. 2024
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For those with snowblowers, loose pieces of crushed gravel can spell trouble for the impeller.
—Andy Wilcox, Better Homes & Gardens, 9 June 2026
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Ziemba had the snowblower out, but many are making do with shovels.
—Liz Crawford, CBS News, 26 Jan. 2026
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With a two-stage snowblower, the snow is pulled in with the auger, transferred to an impeller, and then ejected.
—Bobbi Dempsey, Popular Mechanics, 27 Jan. 2023
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The manual that comes with your snowblower shouldn't be ignored.
—Caitlin Sole, Better Homes & Gardens, 11 Nov. 2021
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Neighbors with access to the garage did not borrow the snowblower or see anyone.
—cleveland, 14 Feb. 2020
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Each snowblower comes with a fleet of about 15 dump trucks, which collect the snow that the machines push out.
—Antonia Noori Farzan, The Providence Journal, 26 Feb. 2026
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Shovels and snowblowers were no match against what became a towering icy mass.
—Corina Knoll, New York Times, 15 Mar. 2023
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My wife made a huge pot of soup to help keep us warm, my son created a path with a snowblower so that our dogs could romp in the snow.
—Letters To The Editor, Hartford Courant, 27 Jan. 2026
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The snowblower becomes both a practical tool and a weapon of judgment.
—Mark Glende, Twin Cities, 15 Aug. 2025
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When the storm was over, the hail was so deep people needed shovels and snowblowers to clear it from the roads and sidewalks.
—Angela Fritz, Washington Post, 12 June 2017
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Enough so that one business owner has rented a flame-throwing, snowblower to help melt the blocks of ice that have formed.
—Will Richmond, The Providence Journal, 30 Jan. 2026
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As snow falls, the MTA’s ten snowblower trains will also help keep the rails clean.
—Josephine Stratman, New York Daily News, 23 Jan. 2026
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Hopefully your neighbor stops by with that snowblower.
—Janet Loehrke, USA Today, 22 Jan. 2026
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Spread cleared snow evenly with a shovel or snowblower instead of relying on plows.
—David Beaulieu, The Spruce, 23 Feb. 2026
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The scraping of plow trucks and the roar of snowblowers echoed through town as cars sat buried in snowdrifts and neighbors spent hours clearing driveways.
—Aaron Parseghian, CBS News, 26 Jan. 2026
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Others used suburban-style snowblowers to clear paths that allowed anglers to walk across a thin frozen layer on top of about two feet of slush.
—Joe Barrett, WSJ, 3 Mar. 2020
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In a back hallway near the locker room, a group of student staffers attempted to assemble a snowblower.
—Danielle Lerner, San Antonio Express-News, 16 Mar. 2022
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The longer your driveway, the steeper it is pitched and the higher the average snowfall, the bigger your snowblower needs to be.
—The Editors, Field & Stream, 6 Feb. 2020
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To dispose of them safely, farmers dice them with a snowblower, spread them across their fields and let the winter elements degrade them.
—Washington Post, 5 Feb. 2022
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And the snowblower, the one some Florida natives mistook for a rototiller?
—Jim Stingl, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 14 Sep. 2017
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'snowblower.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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