To cloud; to cover with mist; to dim.
To rain in very fine drops; as, it mists.
Water vapor suspended in the air in very small drops finer than rain, larger than FOG.
Similar to fog, but visibility remains more than a kilometre. To top
A visible aggregate of minute water droplets or ice crystals suspended in the atmosphere that reduces visibility to less than 7 statute miles but greater than or equal to 5/8 statute mile.
a slight fog caused by condensation of moisture.
Similar to fog, but visibility is greater than 1 kilometre.
A mass of cool air filled with tiny droplets close to ground level.
An aerosol formed by the dispersion of a liquid into very fine particles.
Visible water or hydrocarbon vapour; floating or falling in fine drops.
liquid particles up to 100 microns in diameter
a thin fog with condensation near the ground
make less visible or unclear; "The stars are obscured by the clouds"
spray finely or cover with mist
an airborne cloud of tiny liquid droplets
In the United States the same as drizzle.
Mist occurs as water droplets nucleating on cold particles at humidities in the range of 95-99
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 veil over the landscape.
A state of atmospheric obscurity produced by suspended microscopic water droplets or wet hygroscopic particles. The term used for synoptic purpose when visibility is equal to or exceeds 1 km ; the corresponding relative humidity is greater than 95 percent.
A liquid particle aerosol, typically formed by physical shearing of liquids, such as in nebulization, spraying, or bubbling.1
very fine water droplets at ground level that occur in air with a halo.
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).
A dispersion of a liquid in a gas (aerosol of liquid droplets) in which the droplets have diameters less than a specified size. In industry mists have droplet sizes of less than 10 micrometres; in the atmosphere mists have droplet sizes in the range 2 to 100 micrometres.
Liquid particles measuring 40 to 500 microns, are formed by condensation of vapor. By comparison, fog particles are smaller than 40 microns.
Liquid particles measuring 40 to 500 micrometers (pm) are formed by condensation of vapour. By comparison, fog particles are smaller than 40 micrometers (pm).
A liquid condensation particle with sizes ranging from submicroscopic to visible.
a very thin layer of fog containing few water droplets
A hydrometeor consisting of an aggregate of microscopic and more-or-less hygroscopic water droplets suspended in the atmosphere. It reduces visibility to a lesser extent than fog. The relative humidity of mist is often less than 95 percent.
Consists of microscopic water droplets suspended in the air which produce a thin greyish veil over the landscape. It reduces visibility to a lesser extent than fog.
Suspension in the air of microscopic water droplets or wet hydroscopic particles, which reduce the visibility at the Earth's surface.
fine liquid droplets suspended in or falling through a moving or stationary gas atmosphere.
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.
1. Thin film of moisture condensed on a surface in small drops or falling through the atmosphere. 2. A fine spray. 3. Cloudiness or film, dimming or blurring.
Slight impairment of visibility resulting from water droplets suspended in the air.
Suspended liquid droplets generally less than 10 microns, generated by condensation from the gaseous to the liquid state, or by breaking up a liquid into a dispersed state, such as by splashing, foaming and atomizing.