Visible watery vapor suspended in the atmosphere, at or near the surface of the earth; fog., Coarse, watery vapor, floating or falling in visible particles, approaching the form of rain; as, Scotch mist., Hence, anything which dims or darkens, and obscures or intercepts vision., To cloud; to cover with mist; to dim., To rain in very fine drops; as, it mists.
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".
When there is a mist, when sun is rising. Which seems mist is shining
It means mist
it derived from the Indian name 'temeku' meaning "mist from the hills"
Water or water mixed with herbs. If it is spelled with an accent before the e, it is a spray, foam, or mist.
Water or water mixed with herbs. If it is spelled with an accent before the e, it is a spray, foam, or mist.
the mist is about clouds of mist trapping people inside a store because the mist had flesh eating monsters.
Mist is a very dense water vapor, almost as thick as fog. ... As a verb, mist means "to cover with mist," so you might mist your dry plants or watch your windows mist up in the rain. Mist can also refer to a general dimness or cloudiness: "She watched through the mist of her tears."
The homophone for mist is missed as in He missed the bus.
Missed- as in you missed the bus Mist- as in mist above a lake
I think I read this in 'Tuhoe, Children of the Mist' by Elsdon Best, that Mataatua means - Face of God.
The mist is what separates mortals from the world of the gods and monsters. A battle between a demigod and monster could occur in a crowd, but the mortals might see it as someone pushing back an escaped tiger. There are a small handful of mortals that can see through the mist.