12 Metaphors for misted

The mist on his skin was the same cool joy he had expected.

"The mist is the yellow leaves they're dropping," thought Eric.

The Mist of Spring was the little Indian maiden's .

'Auld Reekie,' as the Scotch call it, always looks her best through a mist, and a Scotch mist is not a rare eventso we saw the city under its most becoming veil.

In ten minutes the mist became a fog, white and thick.

Yet the tears of Heaven still trickle down and fall as dew-drops upon the face of his spouse, and the mists that rise in the evening from her bosom are the sighs of regret which she sends up to her husband on high.

None more than I had cherished mystery and dream: my life until now had been but a mist which revealed as each cloud wreathed and went out, the red of some strange flower or some tall peak, blue and snowy and fairylike in lonely moonlight; and now so great was my conversion that the more brutal the outrage offered to my ancient ideal, the rarer and keener was my delight.

Mists are the vapor near the ground rendered visible by the temperature of the air falling below that of the vapor.

Now, whenever this sea-mist was out over the world the Lady of the Hills, without coming out of her chamber, knew of it, and she would prevent Martin from leaving the bed and going out.

Every one admits the presence of mist on these occasions, and this mist must be merely a collection of intangible and very minute particles of suspended water.

I was then told, to my astonishment and dismay, that the curious white mist which I had taken to be fog was a dense driving cloud of snow, hurled out of the mouth of the ravine by a storm, which had apparently just begun in the upper gorges of the Stanavoi range.

The sea-mist was like rain in their faces.

12 Metaphors for  misted