The word 'sleet' entered the written record in Middle English around 1300, in the form 'slete.' Its origin is Germanic, probably related to Middle Low German 'slōten' (to hail, to throw down hailstones) and Middle High German 'slōze' (hailstone), which became modern German dialectal 'Schloße' (hailstone). The ultimate root is thought to be a Proto-Germanic form meaning 'to strike' or 'to beat,' reflecting the percussive quality of ice pellets hitting surfaces. The word has no certain cognates outside the Germanic family.
Sleet's precise meaning differs between American and British English — a difference that reflects genuine meteorological complexity. In American English, as defined by the National Weather Service, sleet refers to ice pellets: raindrops that freeze into small, translucent balls of ice before reaching the ground. They bounce when they land and make a distinctive tapping sound. In British English, as used by the Met Office
The distinction between sleet, freezing rain, hail, and snow is meteorologically significant. Sleet (American sense) forms when snowflakes fall through a warm layer of air, melt into raindrops, then pass through a cold layer near the surface and refreeze into ice pellets. Freezing rain follows a similar path but does not refreeze in the air — instead, the supercooled drops freeze on contact with cold surfaces, forming a dangerous glaze of ice. Hail forms very differently, growing
The practical impact of sleet is often underestimated. While individual ice pellets are small and seem harmless, heavy sleet accumulations can coat roads with a treacherous layer of icy pellets, reduce visibility, and disrupt transportation. Sleet is frequently a precursor to or companion of freezing rain, making it a warning sign of more dangerous icing conditions.
In literature, sleet appears as a marker of the most unpleasant weather — colder than rain, less dramatic than snow, more miserable than either. Dickens uses sleet to establish mood: the opening of 'A Christmas Carol' places Scrooge in a world of 'cold, bleak, biting weather; foggy withal' — the kind of weather in which sleet thrives. The word carries connotations of grimness, endurance, and discomfort that snow, with its associations of beauty and quiet, does not.
The verb 'to sleet' (used impersonally: 'it is sleeting') has been in use since the fourteenth century. The adjective 'sleety' describes weather characterized by sleet. The compound 'sleet storm' appears from the eighteenth century. In informal American usage, 'a wintry mix' — the meteorological forecast term for precipitation that may include snow, sleet, and freezing rain — has become a familiar and mildly dreaded phrase.