misty
When there is a mist, when sun is rising. Which seems mist is shining
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 a noun and a verb.
Mist is water vapour that is in the air, it is not really a solution.
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".
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 mist is about clouds of mist trapping people inside a store because the mist had flesh eating monsters.
No, the word foggy is not a noun. Foggy is an adjective, a word that describes a noun (foggy morning).The noun form for the adjective foggy is fogginess. A related noun form is fog.
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
mist = Nebel
The homophone for "mist" is "missed."
Sea Mist.
The Mist was created in 1980.
When there is a mist, when sun is rising. Which seems mist is shining
You missed the mist.