Humid refers to the amount of moisture in the air. When you say the air is humid it is when there is a lot of water vapor in the air. When there is little water vapor in the air it is usually referred to as low humidity or dry air. There is no exact amount of water vapor in the air that determines whether we say it is humid or not.
High humidity is a climatic term. If there is high humidity, it means there is a higher percentage of water vapour in the air.
high humidity is how high the air temperature is of the water vapour in the air.
The amount of moisture in the air.
It means that the air is near its due point (it can not hold any more water in solution), this means when you sweat this will not evaporate and yo will feel hot ans sticky as a result.
air pressure decreases!
You can't average temperature and humidity, because they have different units. You can average their numbers, but that result has no meaning.
It means that there is a low humidity level. The lower the humidity level is, the weather becomes drier, too. The cause is the prolonged lack of rain.
Humidity
relative humidity
Humidity is a condition of a gas, you add moisture to a gas to increase it's humidity and dry it to reduce the humidity when air gets to 100% humidity it may rain?
The amount of moisture in the air.
You can't average temperature and humidity, because they have different units. You can average their numbers, but that result has no meaning.
Relative Just like "relative humidity"
It means that there is a low humidity level. The lower the humidity level is, the weather becomes drier, too. The cause is the prolonged lack of rain.
One would be the air having 100% relative humidity, meaning all the air is at the same temperature.
Several sources show that there is essentially no water on Saturn. Therefore no humidity.
Yes the word humidity is a noun. It is an uncountable noun meaning water vapor in the air.
Humidity
Either you have answered your own question in the question itself, or the question is essentially unanswerable - it depends on the actual meaning of the question. Do you want to know the difference in meaning beweeen the two terms, or the difference in the actual figures? The latter is unanswerable.
relative humidity
Dampness, clamminess, oppressiveness, sultriness, sweatiness, mugginess, heaviness...
The word "unmanageable" is an adjective meaning "difficult to control." i.e. "The high humidity rendered my hair unmanageable"