Winter Vocabulary & Phrasal Verbs

Winter Vocabulary & Phrasal Verbs: Talk About the Cold Like a Native Speaker

Introduction

December brings frosty mornings, early sunsets and cosy evenings indoors. It’s also a great time to learn useful English vocabulary for winter weather. In this post, you’ll learn some winter Vocabulary & Phrasal Verbs:

  • Key winter weather words
  • Natural expressions and phrasal verbs
  • Example sentences
  • A short practice activity

Let’s warm up your winter English!

Essential Winter Weather Vocabulary

Word / PhraseMeaningExample Sentence
Frost / FrostyA thin layer of ice on surfacesThe grass was covered in frost this morning.
FreezingVery coldIt’s freezing outside – don’t forget your gloves!
IcySlippery with iceBe careful, the roads are icy today.
SnowfallWhen snow comes downWe had heavy snowfall last night.
BlizzardA strong snowstorm with windThe blizzard made driving impossible.
Bitter coldExtremely cold and sharpA bitter cold wind blew across the street.
SlushWet, melting snow on the groundMy shoes got soaked in the slush.
Nippy (informal, UK)Slightly coldIt’s a bit nippy today – wear a scarf.

Useful Winter Phrasal Verbs

Phrasal VerbMeaningExample Sentence
Warm upGet warm or make something warmCome inside and warm up by the fire.
Cool offBecome coolerIt’s going to cool off after sunset.
Wrap up (warm)Dress in warm clothesMake sure you wrap up warm today.
Snow inBe stuck somewhere because of snowWe were snowed in for two days last winter.
Freeze overWhen water turns to iceThe lake froze over during the night.
Heat upWarm something (usually food or drink)Let me heat up some soup for you.

Natural Winter Expressions

  • “I can see my breath!” (meaning it’s very cold)
  • “It’s minus two today.” (common for below-zero temperatures)
  • “I’m layered up today.” (wearing several layers of clothing)
  • “My hands are numb.” (no feeling because of the cold)

Example Dialogue

A: It’s freezing this morning!
B: I know! I had to wrap up warm before leaving the house.
A: Same here. The pavement was so icy I almost slipped.
B: I hope it warms up later — I’m tired of this bitter cold.

Mini Practice Activity

Fill in the blanks with the correct vocabulary or phrasal verb:

  1. It’s really __________ outside — you’ll need a thick coat.
  2. The lake __________ over last night.
  3. Don’t forget to __________ warm before you go out.
  4. After walking in the snow, we came inside to __________ up.
  5. The roads are __________ today, so drive carefully.

[answers at the end]

Conclusion

Now you’re ready to talk about winter weather like a native speaker!
Try describing today’s weather in your town using at least three new expressions from this post.

(Answers: 1. freezing / nippy – 2. froze – 3. wrap up – 4. warm – 5. icy)