Yes, the noun 'mist' is a concrete noun, a word for a mass of fine drops of a liquid suspended in the air; a word for a physical thing.The noun 'mist' is sometimes used in an abstract contextsuch as through the mist of memory or the mist of time.The word 'mist' is also a verb: mist, mists, misted.
Mist is ukungu in Swahili. Note -- the word is also used for mold or mildew.
Fog.
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".
There was a mist descending around them, so they decided to leave and make their way home.
The root word of mist is "Mist" itself. The word "mist" comes from Old English "mist" meaning "dimness, mist" and is related to the Middle Low German "mist" meaning "dung, manure".
The homophone word for "mist" is "missed."
The homophone of the word "missed" is "mist."
mist = Nebel
A homophone for the word "miss" is "mist."
Yes, the noun 'mist' is a concrete noun, a word for a mass of fine drops of a liquid suspended in the air; a word for a physical thing.The noun 'mist' is sometimes used in an abstract contextsuch as through the mist of memory or the mist of time.The word 'mist' is also a verb: mist, mists, misted.
Mist
Mist is ukungu in Swahili. Note -- the word is also used for mold or mildew.
my mom might go outside in the mist
Dad drove me to school because I missed the bus.
sabishi Kiri is lonely mist because you can't say alone mist
brouillard