the answer to that is that the prefix is opti which means glasses and the root word is mist which means the mist and the suffix is ic which means i see you
steam and mist are not the same thing
Nigella sativa is related to Love-in -the- Mist (Nigella damascena) but is not the same and does not have the same healing qualities. Buy the real seeds,and don't be tempted to try the Love-in-the -Mist seeds.
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."
It means mist
In Japanese, 赤 (aka) means red and 霧 (kiri) means mist/fog, so you could say 赤い霞 (akai kiri) to indicate a red mist/fog.
A homonym for "mist" is "missed," where both words sound the same but have different meanings.
mist
because the mist creates an effect that means the eye is oblivious to whats behind the mist
Haunani means: beautiful mist.
so ein mist is the closest you can get to that translation because mist literally means manure
mist, haze