What's the difference between lemonade and snowball?

Lemonade


Definition:

  • (n.) A beverage consisting of lemon juice mixed with water and sweetened.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) That is the show and that’s the best and worst thing about it,” he says, before using a recent parody of Beyoncé’s monologues in her visual album Lemonade as an example.
  • (2) Readers may recall the Burl Ives record about a poor, cold, tired hobo who sings about the fantastical land with "the birds and the bees and the cigarette trees, where the lemonade springs and the bluebird sings …" Yup, that's where we're living now, although the chancellor might have ruled out "the lake of stew and of whiskey too", since whisky is up 36p a bottle, while stew tax remains unchanged.
  • (3) Eight analyses of a lemonade sample gave a mean of 88 ppb with a coefficient of variation of 11%.
  • (4) Recipe supplied by Ross Clarke, Dirty Bones, dirty-bones.com Rosemary and lemonade bourbons This will make more syrup than you need, but it keeps well in the fridge, and the recipe is easily doubled.
  • (5) Results indicate that sucrose was both preferred and considered sweeter than fructose in sugar cookies, white cake, and vanilla pudding; however, the reverse was true in lemonade.
  • (6) In many ways, however, the event is the perfect forum to show the ability of its talented citizens to turn lemons into lucrative lemonade.
  • (7) A young girl is given a plastic bag of sweets and a bottle of lemonade after being genitally mutilated … the story of the 10-year fight against female genital mutilation by two film-makers has been made into a hour long documentary by the Guardian and BBC Arabic and will go out across the Arab world from Friday, reaching a combined global audience of 30 million viewers.
  • (8) "When juiced with a bit of lemon, apple and ginger and a tiny hit of refreshing mint, it turns into a sort of grassy lemonade."
  • (9) In lemonades, almost 90% of sucrose may be replaced by CH-401-salts.
  • (10) Neither parotid nor whole-mouth secretion changed from baseline when subjects viewed fresh lemons and lemonade presented in a plastic box.
  • (11) The Swede wasn't bad, though she wasn't half as good as the Swedes in 1974 whose victory had my Swedish mother treating us all to R White's lemonade.
  • (12) During the spring fair ( Feria de Abril , 30 April-7 May), half the city decamps to the casetas of the Recinto Ferial to parade on horseback, drink sherry with lemonade, and dance sevillanas .
  • (13) Preserved lemonade Salty lemonade might sound odd, but it's wonderfully refreshing on a hot day.
  • (14) Lime drink ideal point, hot-drink sugaring habits and the preferences for cake trolley over cheeseboard, flavoured milk shake over ice-cold milk, lemonade or tonic water over soda water and bread and margarine with honey or chocolate spread over plain bread and margarine, were all reliably associated positively with each other.
  • (15) Jeff Bechdel, a spokesman for America Rising, told the Guardian: “Secretary Clinton’s Snapchat joke, if it can be called that, offers further evidence that she doesn’t understand the seriousness of the investigation into her private email account.” Facebook Twitter Pinterest Hillary Clinton enjoys a lemonade and a traditional Iowan delicacy – a pork chop on a stick.
  • (16) An enrichment of viruses in lemonade was possible only with previously prepared and aged flocs of tin and iron.
  • (17) She is always asking, what is the core commentary here that we can use to drive the writing?” The result has been instantly classic sketches that have circulated massively on YouTube and social media, such as the hip-hop music video satire Milk Milk Lemonade and Last Fuckable Day.
  • (18) Most of the attention from those concerned about growing obesity levels among children is still on soft drinks with added sugar, such as colas and lemonade, which are consumed in enormous quantities.
  • (19) Lemonade, fruit drinks, wine, and beer samples (138 total) were analyzed for DEC. Sixteen samples had greater than 30 ppb DEC.
  • (20) By the use of simple agents, such as glucagon, lemonade and quick-acting insulin, such episodes can usually be averted in the early stages by the diabetic, his family and his doctor.

Snowball


Definition:

  • (n.) A round mass of snow pressed or roller together, or anything resembling such a mass.
  • (n.) The Guelder-rose.
  • (v. t.) To pelt with snowballs; to throw snowballs at.
  • (v. i.) To throw snowballs.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) For accurate diagnosis of INCL a biopsy with characteristic EM findings of "snowball" aggregates is a necessity.
  • (2) Edinburgh students called on outside supporters to stage snowball fights in solidarity, while Oxford's Facebook page features support from sympathisers, but also anger from English and theology students unable to get hold of books and data for this week's essays.
  • (3) The number of complaints is expected to snowball with further press coverage of the fallout from the stunt.
  • (4) The too-liberal availability of payday loans has created an easy way for people in desperate need to defer their shortfall temporarily but cause it to snowball in the long run.
  • (5) 'The positive critical reception, word of mouth and the rise of Nordic noir fiction has seen a snowball effect on the popularity of subtitled drama' The Returned Were it not for the success of The Killing et al, The Returned might have found itself quietly picking up a small but loyal audience in a graveyard slot on E4, or the network might have preferred to wait for the forthcoming US remake.
  • (6) I really hope there's a snowball effect from that," said Glover, who was signed up to the Sporting Giants programme trawling for talent in rowing, handball and volleyball in 2008.
  • (7) Snowballing and personal contacts were the most successful means of recruiting those not in treatment, while advertising was comparatively unsuccessful with this group because of the importance of establishing the credibility of the study and the interviewer among injecting drug users before they will volunteer to be involved.
  • (8) There is a real prospect of deficits snowballing and, unless the government finds extra money, an accelerating decline in NHS performance and a deterioration in patient care”, said Richard Murray, director of policy at the King’s Fund.
  • (9) I think it is a question of as and when policy, albeit coordinated or on a region basis, if policy starts to have an impact on demand, then we could potentially see thekind of scenario evolve where demand is weaker, supply starts to moderate and then these higher cost producers would be some of the first affected... It’s not that they are going to fall of a cliff that quickly, but they would not continue to reinvest [in developing those reserves].” Wilkins said the divestment movement was being closely watched and appeared to be snowballing.
  • (10) Some people in Washington helpfully used a snowball to illustrate that fact.
  • (11) When the shit started hitting the fan Stateside, the original plan to open Brian on 200 screens nationwide snowballed to nearer 600.
  • (12) Respondents were contacted by "snowballing", mainly with the assistance of sex workers.
  • (13) Lebedev, who co-owns the opposition Novaya Gazeta newspaper, said his platform would include protecting the city's rapidly disappearing cultural heritage; improving its 'impossible' traffic; scrapping its airline business; and reducing corruption.Writing on his blog last Thursday (June 18), he observed: 'The city's problems are getting bigger, like a snowball.
  • (14) It is a year since speculation over Jobs' health started to snowball, following an appearance at the same event that saw him looking drastically thin and frail.
  • (15) Interview subjects were selected by "strategic informant snowball sampling," a type of purpose sampling used in anthropological studies, best for collecting descriptive data.
  • (16) In a foreword to the report, Carne said: “In very complex projects sometimes simple things go wrong and these can snowball in short periods of time to become major issues.
  • (17) Over the last few years, her suggestion that local organisations stop trying to reform existing NGO networks and instead form their own has snowballed.
  • (18) A senior Sinn Féin spokesman later told the Guardian there “wasn’t a snowball’s chance in hell” of the party ditching its abstentionism regarding Westminster.
  • (19) "Kids are having a snowball fight on the side of the road, making snow angels, people are walking their dogs."
  • (20) At the moment, we’re a snowball that’s turning over fairly slowly,” says the Greens’ leader, Natalie Bennett.

Words possibly related to "snowball"