Examples of using "Mist" in a sentence and their english translations:
Tom misses you.
- She misses him.
- He misses her.
Tom misses Mary.
Do you miss Boston?
Tom misses you.
She misses him.
Tom lacks confidence.
Tom misses you.
Tom misses Australia.
He misses her.
Tom misses you.
Do you miss Tom?
He misses his family.
You miss him, don't you?
He misses his wife.
He misses his father.
Tom misses his wife.
The fog rises.
She misses her wife.
He misses his husband.
The fog is dense.
He misses his family.
We could see nothing but fog.
She misses her family a lot.
Tom is missing a few teeth.
This table is missing a leg.
Tom never misses Taco Tuesdays.
We could see nothing but fog.
A mist hung over the river.
Be quick, or you will miss the train.
The city was wrapped in fog.
- Nothing is missing.
- Nothing's missing.
You probably miss Tom a lot, don't you?
We could see nothing but fog.
Hurry up, otherwise you'll be late for lunch.
The airport was closed because of the fog.
My father misses my mother and me.
I don't want anyone to miss this.
Due to the fog, traffic is temporarily suspended.
Today the fog is as thick as pea soup.
Hurry up, or you will miss the last train.
I don't want Tom to miss the bus.
The airplane was redirected to Munich, because of the fog.
Do you miss Australia?
And he says, “Come on Bödvar, you’re missing the battle!”
London, where I live, used to be famous for its fog.
He is sometimes absent from school.
You'd better hurry, or you'll miss the train.
- Due to the thick fog, the road was difficult to see.
- Because of the thick fog, the street was hard to see.
- Because of the dense haze, the road was hard to see.
Because of the dense fog, nobody could be seen.
It's so foggy that I can't see anything.
- You'll get there in time, so long as you don't miss the train.
- You'll get there in time, as long as you don't miss the train.
- If you don't miss the train, you'll get there in time.
It felt like hearing a wanderer in the Himalayan fog.
Beware lest you should miss the train.
Hurry up, or you'll miss the bus.
Hurry up, or you will miss the train.
A perfectly healthy sentence, it is true, is extremely rare. For the most part we miss the hue and fragrance of the thought; as if we could be satisfied with the dews of the morning or evening without their colors, or the heavens without their azure.