When referring to a bombing victim, it is when a person's body is blown up by a bomb and nothing remains except the tissue fluid. This fluid that sprays through the air is pink mist.
When referring to a sniper, when the bullet hits the person the velocity is so great that the blood comes out in a mist and because the sniper is far away from the victim the blood appears to be pink not red.
The phrase "wrapped in an impenetrable mist" could mean that the area is covered in thick fog that you can't see through. If it is being used symbolically, it could mean that an area is undiscovered, or even that someone is unable to think straight (as in "my mind was wrapped in an impenetrable mist").
Mist is the correct spelling.An example sentence is "the mist lowered the visibility on the road".Unless you mean "missed". As in "he missed the bus".
Haunani means: beautiful mist.
A noun phrase is a word or group of words based on a noun or pronoun (without a verb) that can function in a sentence as a subject, object of a verb or a preposition. A noun phrase can be one word or many words"Who owns the pink unicycle?" The noun phrase (in bold) is direct object of the verb 'owns'.A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence."Who owns it?" The pronoun 'it' takes the place of the noun phrase as the direct object of the verb 'owns'.
It means to remove water droplets from something, typically a car window that gets mist on the inside. So the heater is used to remove the mist.
A Fine Pink Mist was created on 1996-08-21.
The phrase "wrapped in an impenetrable mist" could mean that the area is covered in thick fog that you can't see through. If it is being used symbolically, it could mean that an area is undiscovered, or even that someone is unable to think straight (as in "my mind was wrapped in an impenetrable mist").
A head shot by a sniper. You can see blood fly up which looks like a "pink mist."
The phrase "tickled pink" means feeling delighted or extremely pleased about something. It conveys a sense of happiness or joy.
The phrase "wrapped in an impenetrable mist" could mean that the area is covered in thick fog that you can't see through. If it is being used symbolically, it could mean that an area is undiscovered, or even that someone is unable to think straight (as in "my mind was wrapped in an impenetrable mist").
What is a pharse? If you mean PHRASE, it is from Narnia.
The phrase 'flame mist' would be translated as 炎の霧 (honō no kiri) in Japanese.炎 (honō) - flameの (no) - modifying particle霧 (kiri) - mist
To urinate. It is the female equivalent of the phrase "drain the main vein."
I have a old pink avon 2oz. Pretty Pink Cologne Mist milkshake bottle. I don't know when it was purchased. I found it at a thrift store.
In the pink: in excellent health physically and emotionally
ever kicked a watermelon? Same thing. its called a "pink mist"
Mist is the correct spelling.An example sentence is "the mist lowered the visibility on the road".Unless you mean "missed". As in "he missed the bus".