19 Words to use with fogs

"Probably doesn't carry any fog horn," said Carter bitterly, voicing a general uneasiness.

That's only a fog-bank, and we shall be all in the dark in ten minutes.

" Some further effort at either persuasion or impudencenobody but Phinuit ever knew whichwas drowned out by the first heart-broken bellow of the whistle sounding the fog signal.

So, of the signals which fog-bells can give, attached to light-houses.

Why won't this miserable fog lift.

Florence Talpey Williams (W); 28Nov66; R398693. Fog loom.

© 15Dec31; B137821. Florence Talpey Williams (W); 20Mar59; R233295. Fog mull.

It grew colder, as if one felt a fog fall, and the wind, mounting slowly, now blew a gale.

Sharp gusts of piercing wind drove the cold mist along, and as the temperature fell in the late afternoon the slush of the roads began to stiffen, and the fog froze where it gathered.

Sometimes, one stands aloft in a clear atmosphere, while beneath the fog rolls like a sea, through which the steeples and towers are just visible "like the masts of stranded vessels."

Mizzle sais it's a dot, and O'Riley swears (no, he don't do that, for we've gin up swearin' in the fog-sail), but he sais that it's a real post, 'bout as thick again as the main-mast, an' nine or ten times as hy.

From an article on the Zeebrugge exploit: "An on-shore wind was needed to carry the fog-screen in advance of the blockships.

But the trio of voyagers had lived too long near the coast not to recognize a fog-siren when they heard its strident call.

The whistle was now roaring like a wounded bull, sending distinct vibrations of sound through the increasing fog billows.

By and by the Onondaga said: "I feel the fog thinning, Dagaeoga.

Zeus passed the night on the summit of Ida, whether he slept or not, and what he did there no one knew, because, Fog-carrying, he wrapped himself in such a thick cloud that even Hera could not see through it.

It's a cold, cold night, and the fog clings so."

If, on Teneriffe's Peak, You'd wish for a steak, Or dip in Vesuvius your spoon, Or slip all the dog-days, The rain-days, and fog-days, Go, call for your air-balloon.

This vapor, at first light as a fog-drift, winds itself upward, and settles into a cloud, that hovers in the air.

19 Words to use with  fogs