Mist in a sentence as a noun

Rain here tends to be a fine mist.

China uses the term "sea mist" to dupe tourists.

I blew in my microphone half-hoping mist would form on top of the window.

They could rove at will among the stars, and sink like a subtle mist through the very interstices of space.

On the naval side I'd imagine just pumping a ton of sea water mist into the air should work.

A rainbow is an optical effect of light passing through a fine mist of water droplets.

Researchers found a lake of water so large......the water vapor is the finest mist...Calling it a lake is totally wrong then.

Mist in a sentence as a verb

I can feel the mist of blown water, suggesting that it's getting my 'bathroom sink rinse' more places, rather than leaving it all in the bathroom.

There got to be some out-of-the-box setups, that lets one fade into the mist of computer illiterates.

Don't listen to that charlatan, you would be much better investing the money in my range of anti-viral mist diffusers.

He beats the whirlwind, leaps into the air, and rises up ninety thousand li, cutting through the clouds and mist, shouldering the blue sky, and then he turns his eyes south and prepares to journey to the southern darkness.

Then, the parallel chords of stacked thirds, modal harmonies, and blurred harmonic rhythm were new and exciting, but now, they've been done so much that it's in every movie's scene in the mist, and every other feminine hygiene product ad.

Any forced-water rinsing seems to guarantee a mixed-mist reaches everywhere, including parts of the buttocks and legs far from the ****** that are never contaminated by paper-wiping.

Since some will wonder, an e-cigarette is "an electrical device that attempts to simulate the act of tobacco smoking by producing an inhaled mist bearing the physical sensation, appearance, and often the flavor and nicotine content of inhaled tobacco smoke.

Mist definitions

noun

a thin fog with condensation near the ground

verb

become covered with mist; "The windshield misted over"

verb

make less visible or unclear; "The stars are obscured by the clouds"; "the big elm tree obscures our view of the valley"

See also: obscure befog becloud obnubilate cloud

verb

spray finely or cover with mist