Meaning mist
What does mist mean? Here you find 72 meanings of the word mist. You can also add a definition of mist yourself

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mist


Similar to fog, but visibility remains more than a kilometre.
Source: bom.gov.au

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mist


Very thin fog in which visibility is greater than 1.0 km (0.62 mi).
Source: wrcc.dri.edu (offline)

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mist


a thin gray cloud of water droplets that condenses in the atmosphere just above the ground.
Source: yardcare.toro.com

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mist


a thin fog with condensation near the ground become covered with mist; "The windshield misted over" obscure: make less visible or unclear; "The stars are obscure [..]
Source: google-dictionary.so8848.com

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mist


Management Information System Tool
Source: health.gov.au

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mist


very low cloud
Source: eenglish.in

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mist


a light fog. Visibility usually remains beyond 1 kilometre.
Source: itseducation.asia

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mist


nepl
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com (offline)

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mist


tuman
Source: yiddishdictionaryonline.com (offline)

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mist


To dream that you are enveloped in a mist, denotes uncertain fortunes and domestic unhappiness. If the mist clears away, your troubles will be of short duration. To see others in a mist, you will profit by the misfortune of others.   
Source: dreams-dictionary.org (offline)

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mist


A dispersion of fine liquid droplets in a gaseous medium.
Source: aiche.org

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mist


A mass of cool air filled with tiny droplets close to ground level.
Source: quick-facts.co.uk

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mist


A dispersion of fine liquid droplets in a gaseous medium.
Source: femoranfp.com (offline)

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mist


Liquid particles measuring 40 to 500 micrometers, are formed by condensation of vapour. By comparison, fog particles are smaller than 40 micrometers.
Source: lenntech.com

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mist


(n) a thin fog with condensation near the ground(v) become covered with mist(v) make less visible or unclear(v) spray finely or cover with mist
Source: beedictionary.com

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mist


Consists of microscopic water droplets suspended in the air, which produces a thin grayish veil over the landscape. It reduces visibility to a lesser extent than fog. In Australia, it is described as [..]
Source: timeanddate.com

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mist


Liquid particles 40 to 500 microns in diameter that are formed by condensation of vapor in air.
Source: cdiac.ornl.gov (offline)

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mist


Management Information System for Transportation, an ITS system that integrates communications, data and video systems, incident detection, and traffic control devices in a comprehensive transportatio [..]
Source: its.uci.edu

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mist


Water vapor suspended in the air in very small drops finer than rain, larger than FOG.
Source: pursuetheoutdoors.com

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mist


Liquid particles measuring 40 to 500 microns, are formed by condensation of vapor. By comparison, fog particles are smaller than 40 microns.
Source: environmentallawyers.com

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mist


Liquid particles measuring 40 to 500 micrometers (pm), are formed by condensation of vapor. By comparison, fog particles are smaller than 40 micrometers (pm).
Source: infohouse.p2ric.org

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mist


Liquid particles measuring 40 to 500 micrometers (pm), are formed by condensation of vapor. By comparison, fog particles are smaller than 40 micrometers (pm).
Source: ehso.com

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mist


A liquor served over a glass filled with crushed ice, often a way of serving liqueur as an after dinner drink.
Source: drinksmixer.com

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mist


To pour a drink over crushed ice.
Source: syrupmagazine.com

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mist


Pouring a prepared drink over crushed ice.
Source: barsupplies.com (offline)

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mist


Pharmacologic agents delivered into the nostrils in the form of a mist or spray.
Source: online-medical-dictionary.org

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mist


A horizontal visibility of more than 200 metres but less than 6 miles caused by water droplets in suspension in the atmosphere.
Source: metcheck.com

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mist


Thin fog that reduces visibility to less than two miles. Meteorologists have a visibility limit of one mile, but the usual practice of seamen is to assume mist to be present when ships
Source: crewtraffic.com

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mist


Serious injuries may occur even though property damage is minimal. Insurance companies often claim that the insured must not have been injured based upon the minimal damage to their automobile.  Insur [..]
Source: azlegalcenter.com

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mist


Machined Integral Shear Tie
Source: abbreviations.com

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mist


    Mistrial
Source: nationalcrimesearch.com

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mist


A visible aggregate of minute water particles suspended in the atmosphere that reduces visibility to less than 7 statue miles (11 kilometers), but greater than or equal to 5/8 statue miles (1 kilometer).
Source: srh.noaa.gov (offline)

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mist


A Mist is an aerosol formed by the dispersion of a liquid into very fine particles.
Source: airfilterusa.com

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mist


Droplets rendered airborne by rubbing, boiling, splashing, or otherwise agitating a liquid.
Source: skcltd.com

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mist


n.(1) "mist," s.v. mist sb.\1 OED. KEY: mist@n1
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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mist


n1 3 myst 2 mystes 1
Source: sites.fas.harvard.edu (offline)

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mist


An aggregate of very small water droplets suspended in the atmosphere. It produces a thin, grayish veil over the landscape. It reduces visibility to a lesser extent than fog. The relative humidity wit [..]
Source: en.wikisource.org

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mist


Suspension in the air of microscopic water droplets or wet hygroscopic particles hanging over land or sea, reducing visibility less than 5 km, but minimal 1km or more. (Criteria used in Belgium).
Source: skystef.be

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mist


A popular expression for drizzle or heavy fog.
Source: aviationweather.ws

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mist


A visible aggregate of minute water particles suspended in the atmosphere that reduces visibility to less than 7 statute miles, but greater than or equal to 5/8 statute miles. It does not reduce visibility as much as fog and is often confused with drizzle.
Source: forecast.weather.gov (offline)

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mist


Small droplets which are ordinarily liquid at normal temperature and pressure.
Source: diversitech.ca (offline)

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mist


Suspended liquid droplets measuring between 500 and 40 microns, generated by condensation from the gaseous to the liquid state, or by breaking up a liquid into a dispersed state, such as splashing, fo [..]
Source: bdma.org.uk

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mist


Small droplets suspended in air near the surface. Droplets are large enough to feel when the air is moving 1 meter per second and is usually associated with stratus clouds. The difference between mist and fog is visibility. If visibility is less than 1 km, then it is fog, otherwise it is called mist.
Source: wunderground.com (offline)

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mist


liquid particles up to 100 microns in diameter
Source: marc.org

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mist


Similar to fog, but visibility is greater than 1 kilometre.
Source: weatherzone.com.au (offline)

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mist


A mass of fine droplets of water, intermediate in size between haze and fog, and near or in contact with the Earth, producing a thin, grayish vel over the landscape.
Source: farmersalmanac.com (offline)

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mist


Very thin fog in which visibility is greater than 1.0 km (0.62 mi).
Source: wrds.uwyo.edu (offline)

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mist


Consists of microscopic water
Source: extremestorms.com.au (offline)

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mist


A collection of microscopic water droplets suspended in the atmosphere. It does not reduce visibility as much as fog and is often confused with drizzle.
Source: docuweather.com (offline)

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mist


A collection of microscopic water droplets suspended in the atmosphere. It does not reduce visibility as much as fog and is often confused with drizzle.
Source: weathershack.com

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mist


Consists of microscopic water droplets suspended in the air which produce a thin grayish veil over the landscape. It reduces visibility to a lesser extent than fog. Muggy
Source: chatteris.biz

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mist


A collection of microscopic water droplets suspended in the air.
Source: ecolinc.vic.edu.au

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mist


A collection of microscopic water droplets suspended in the atmosphere. It does not reduce visibility as much as fog and is often confused with drizzle.
Source: communityweather.org.nz

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mist


A collection of microscopic water droplets
Source: image.weather.com (offline)

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mist


A visible aggregate of minute water particles suspended in the atmosphere that reduces visibility to less than 7 statue miles, but greater than or equal to 5/8 statue miles. It does not reduce visibil [..]
Source: weatherdudes.com

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mist


A collection of microscopic water droplets suspended in the atmosphere. It does not reduce visibility as much as fog and is often confused with drizzle.
Source: 40north70west.com (offline)

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mist


manure (domestic animals’ excrement mixed with hay) * '''2003''', Franz Eugen Schlachter, ''Die Bibel'' (“Schlachter 2000”), Genfer Bibelgesellschaft, 4 Mose 19:5: *: und die junge Kuh soll er vor [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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mist


lang=en 1800s=1843 * '''1843''' — . ''''. *: The sky was gloomy, and the shortest streets were choked up with a dingy mist, half thawed, half frozen, whose heavier particles descended in a shower o [..]
Source: en.wiktionary.org

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mist


Mist is a phenomenon caused by small droplets of water suspended in air. Physically, it is an example of a dispersion. It is most commonly seen where warm, moist air meets sudden cooling, such as in e [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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mist


Mist is a phenomenon caused by small droplets of water suspended in air. Physically, it is an example of a dispersion. It is most commonly seen where warm, moist air meets sudden cooling, such as in e [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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mist


In Norse mythology, Mist (Old Norse "cloud" or mist) is a valkyrie. Mist appears in valkyrie list in the Poetic Edda poem Grímnismál and both of the Nafnaþulur valkyrie lists. No further information [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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Mist (Spanish: Niebla), translated as Fog in a translation by Elena Barcia published by Northwestern University Press, is a novel written by Miguel de Unamuno in 1907 and published in 1914. Unamuno sc [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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mist


The Mist is the name of different DC Comics supervillains, archenemies of the original and 1990s Starman. Kyle Nimbus made his live-action debut on the first season of The Flash, portrayed by Anthony [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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mist


Mist is a weather phenomenon similar to fog. Mist, MIST or The Mist may also refer to:
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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mist


The MIST satellite (MIniature STudent Satellite) is a satellite currently under development at the KTH Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, Sweden. The satellite is a 3U CubeSat, primarily bui [..]
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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mist


Mist (Turkish: Sis) is a 1988 Swedish-German-Turkish drama film directed by Zülfü Livaneli.
Source: en.wikipedia.org

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mist


Small liquid droplets (moisture or liquid hydrocarbons) in a gas stream. In separators, mist extractors are used to collect mist.
Source: glossary.oilfield.slb.com

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mist


A visible aggregate of minute water particles suspended in the atmosphere that reduces visibility to less than 7 statute miles, but greater than or equal to 5/8 statute miles. It does not reduce visib [..]
Source: w1.weather.gov

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mist


Old English mistian "to become misty, to be or grow misty;" see mist (n.). Meaning "To cover with mist" is early 15c. Related: Misted; misting.
Source: etymonline.com

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mist


Old English mist "dimness (of eyesight), mist" (earliest in compounds, such as misthleoðu "misty cliffs," wælmist "mist of death"), from Proto-Germanic *mikhstaz (source [..]
Source: etymonline.com

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mist


clouds at ground-level, but with greater visibility than fog. Read more in the NG Education Encyclopedia
Source: nationalgeographic.org

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mist


Military Information Support Team (US)
Source: psywar.org





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