| mist. |
Slight impairment of visibility resulting from water droplets suspended in the air.
Ãâó: www.bbc.co.uk/weather/weatherwise/glossary/m.shtml
|
|---|---|
| mistletoe |
an important nectar source for birds, butterflies, brushtail possums and yellow-bellied gliders. The mistletoes flower abundantly every year, while other nectar sources - such as their host eucalypts - flower irregularly. About 25 species of native butterflies and moths also feed on mistletoes during their larval stage. Of those, eight species of delias are entirely dependent on mistletoe. ...
Ãâó: www.artistwd.com/joyzine/australia/strine/m-3.php
|
| mist. |
a slight fog caused by condensation of moisture.
Ãâó: www.aeroplanemonthly.com/glossary/glossary_M.htm
|
| mist. |
A mass of cool air filled with tiny droplets close to ground level.
Ãâó: www.fisicx.com/quickreference/weather/glossary.htm...
|
| mist. |
Very thin fog in which visibility is greater than 1.0 km (0.62 mi).
Ãâó: www.wrcc.dri.edu/ams/glossary.html
|
| MIST | physically abused |
|---|---|
| MIST | the practice of treating (someone or something) badly |
| MIST | a woman master who directs the work of others |
| MIST | an adulterous woman |
| MIST | a woman schoolteacher |
| MIST | a trial that is invalid or inconclusive |
| MIST | the trait of not trusting others |
| MIST | doubt about someone's honesty |
| MIST | regard as untrustworthy |
| MIST | openly distrustful and unwilling to confide |
| MIST | with distrust |
| MIST | filled or abounding with fog or mist |
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