Today the highest maximum temperatures between a nationwide are 0 C chilly minus 2 C vary expected and there is no respite from the cold in sight.
Temperatures fell to overnight on Sunday. 4F (-18 c) in parts of Yorkshire during morning commuters of chilly travel to work by snow and patches face of freezing fog destroy made.
A band of snow moving from the South of Scotland will be expected to Northern England later on Monday, potentially more chaos on the streets as drivers fight bring home from work.
Some parts are expected snow to see between five to 10 inches.
Now the Central England and areas such as Gloucester and the Cotswolds of likely patches are freezing fog.
From the lowest night temperature. 4F (-18 C) joined Topcliffe in North Yorkshire.
Buyer turn your back on the High Street, due to the snow and ice online orders and deliveries are expected to hit unprecedented levels in the next three weeks.
Today called "Mega Monday" was and will be busiest online shopping day of the year, with an estimated 1,200 orders per minute is expected. Throughout the day spend Internet shopping is currently expected to 633 million pounds.
Deliveries of were, which have already been ordered moved because of the weather, and up and down the country thousands of households have no post for days, leads to huge backlogs Royal Mail depots.
And with the met buyers Association haulage road Office forecast next snow mid December, there was a "real possibility" that presented in time for Christmas will arrive is warned.
Kate Gibbs, Association's spokesman, said: "road haulage operators will do their absolute best to ensure that your business as usual in this winter but returns if the snow with the same ferocity as last week delayed delivery during Christmas it's inevitable we'll see."
David Irlam, the Executive Director of the Stobart group, mainly food and drink supplies, told the BBC that caused weather "big questions".
He added: "it's one of the busiest times of the year and we have a 24 hours seven days a week operation involved." "But we will not catch up seriously for a further two weeks yet."
Retail experts up to 75 percent last year online revenue and some, including Amazon, play.com and Vouchercodes.co.uk increase believe sales are predicted so-called "mega Monday", dwarf last week, where British consumers an estimated 537 million £ spent in one day.
It comes to beat the population shops by nearly 50 percent in some areas last week fell when buyers inside, were stuck with Yorkshire and Humberside worst hit.
But it was all doom and gloom on the High St though to see John Lewis per sales of £ 103,7 million to 1.2pc last year.
A 1,814 members cybermonday.co.uk survey found almost half of the British buyer to the online shop had planned last week.
IMRG who trade body, online retailers predicted trading today between noon and 1 pm, peak, how their lunch hour office workers use click and buy.
Moneysupermarket.com predicted sales today by 633 million £, 18 percent up on "Manic Monday".
None of the big supermarkets said, problems with deliveries to homes or in the stores were forecast.
Ian Smith, Chief Executive Officer of Nightfreight that every day 40,000 shipments provides, said she was forced to cope with additional drivers and vehicles and have doubled customers call service resources.
Iain speak, Chief Executive Officer of Bibby distribution, one of UK's largest privately owned haulage company, said the recent "hard" on his drivers had been conditions.
He said: "as an industry, we are the glue, UK PLC holds together and everything we buy from our business has been delivered by road, whether it food, food, shoes or gifts for Christmas."
"It has been difficult." It of hard enough, provide some places in the height of summer, let alone during weather conditions we have seen recently. "If a vehicle from A to B economically and efficiently preserved the country to a standstill comes."
Last Monday forecast of the year was led that the retailers today more sales predict online his shopping "Mega Monday", but the number of people who the bitter weather have placed your weekend shopping trips because of the.

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