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  1. Apr 30, 2013 · Apr 30, 2013. #6. They might be abbreviations for mistress and master. 'Mast' looks very breast-like if you see it as a Greek root, and the 'i' and 'a' that distinguish the two words - well, one looks flat or even masculine and the other looks very rounded. Humbert seems to prefer this to the traditional "chalk and cheese".

  2. Sep 28, 2008 · It's simply called steam coming out of my/your/etc. mouth. I believe my mother! GF.. Note it is technically nearly impossible unless you have a tube in your mouth that is letting out steam! PS Breath is generally very explicit (on a cold day) Last edited: Sep 28, 2008.

  3. Jan 24, 2014 · English - South-East England. Jan 24, 2014. #2. Normally you use 'mist'. If something began a long time ago, so that we no longer know how or why it began, we say its origin is 'lost in the mists of time'. This is probably the only common use today of 'mists'. It has a literary flavour, and it probably had in Dickens's time too: if Dickens had ...

  4. Mar 26, 2008 · It's partly a question of droplet size. <100 microns - mist droplets are so small that they remain suspended in the air. 100-200 Mizzle 200-300 Drizzle 300-1,000 Light rain >1000 Rain It's partly a question of duration. A shower doesn't last so long that you couldn't wait for it to stop before going out. It's partly a question of inter-droplet ...

  5. May 12, 2007 · Hola: "Mist tent" se le dice a las "carpas" utilizadas en el hospital, usualmente se usan en pacientes pediátricos, y para mantener una concentración adecuada de oxigeno. In the hospital, a child with croup is often put in a mist tent. This is a plastic enclosure filled with mist from a vaporizer. Mist tents are also used to treat infants ...

  6. Aug 11, 2013 · Aug 11, 2013. #1. Hi guys, I found something I don't understand from the book Ender's Game and I hope you guys could enlighten mean. The term is "Medley's Mist-E-Rub" and here's the context. [ They went out Lake Brandt Road and turned off just past the lake, following a road that wound down and up until they came to a white clapboard mansion ...

  7. Apr 30, 2009 · "Ssh!, he said, the words turning to red mist and circling us like butterflies" The scene goes like this: there are some zombies coming out of a building, and the guy here just tells his friends to shut up before spreading his arms in front of them and backing them to the wall. As the guy is...

  8. Jun 29, 2015 · EdisonBhola said: Hi all, what is the idiomatic, everyday way to say that the rain is really small, like a mist? The usual word to descibe this is "drizzle": light rain falling in very fine drops. So while only version (3) of your suggestions would work, you could also say something like "There was drizzle this morning".

  9. Sep 1, 2012 · There's obviously a reason for the difference in tense, but semantically, it doesn't make a big difference. Did - strictly past (Did I miss something? (in the past, which is done and gone) Have I missed something? - literally means - Did I miss something in the past continuing up until the present moment - hence, present perfect. M.

  10. May 30, 2007 · USA; English. May 30, 2007. #2. Probably 'foggy', in that situation. Fog implies heavy and very low clouds that you can't see through very well. Mist just implies a very very light, barely-there rain, and doesn't affect visibility as much, necessarily. I.

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