Snow in this sentence is the verb.
It is highly unlikely that it will snow in Hawaii tomorrow, as Hawaii's climate is typically warm and tropical, with snow being extremely rare and limited to the highest elevations of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa on the Big Island.
There is no forecast for Snow in Rochdale, UK, for the remainder of the week.
no
yes it 37oF
There's a winter weather advisory for 3-5".
No
Snow is not in the forecast for tomorrow, February 2, 2012.
"snow" is a verb.
Tomorrow is January 12, 2015. Snow is very likely over much of Pennsylvania tomorrow.
it will snow
If you are reading this today, it is Wednesday, however, if you are reading it tomorrow then today is Thursday; or if you are reading it on tomorrow's tomorrow, today is Friday; but then again, reading it on tomorrow's tomorrow's tomorrow, today is Saturday, and so on. So depending when you are reading this relative to when I wrote it, today is Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, Monday or Tuesday. However, if you look at the history for this question, you will see that I am writing this on the 6th of June 2012 and today (whilst I am writing it) is Wednesday.
Snow in this sentence is the verb.
It is highly unlikely that it will snow in Hawaii tomorrow, as Hawaii's climate is typically warm and tropical, with snow being extremely rare and limited to the highest elevations of Mauna Kea and Mauna Loa on the Big Island.
There is no forecast for Snow in Rochdale, UK, for the remainder of the week.
no
no"Snow" can either be a noun (eg: "There's snow on the ground") or a verb (eg: It will snow tomorrow), but not an adverb.