dissapeared
The phrase comes from Prospero's famous speech in The Tempest, as follows: "These our actors, as I foretold you, were all spirits and are melted into air, into thin air". It means to disappear without a trace.
In the Tempest (Act 4 scene 1) Shakespeare has Prospero say: These our actors, As I foretold you, were all spirits and Are melted into air, into thin air:
yes they vanished into thin air and hid for a few years
"Vanish into thin air" means to disappear suddenly and completely without leaving a trace.
To his astonishment, the dog had jumped over the fence.
It means it just appeared - as if out of air. Like the phrase 'out of THIN air" they mean the same thing
probably not; the disappearances didn't just happen at three different areas. Also, that wouldn't explain the planes that vanished into thin air
It comes from Shakespeare. First in Othello and then in Tempest. The full phrase, Vanish into thin air, didn't start until the early 19th century. But the phrase surely started with Shakespeare.
The correct way to spell the word is apparently.Some example sentences are:Apparently, we are going to the beach tomorrow.She is apparently the mayor of Liverpool.It appears that my keys have apparently vanished into thin air.
If you mean, thin layer of air, or thin gaseous layer surrounding the earth then the answer is; Atmosphere. But if not, then the other thin layer of earth is; The crust, but its a solid layer.
depends on what you mean dissolve, if you are saying as in acids, then hydrochloric acid can dissolve it just like it does in our stomachs. But if you are saying like decomposed and 'disappear into thin air', then bacteria and fungi, with the help of some helpers like wood-louses or maggots, will 'dissolve' it. Anyway, what does meat have to do with ADOLF HITLER?
Into Thin Air was created in 1997.