different between humid vs drizzly
humid
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Old French humide, from Latin humidus, umidus (“moist”). Via Proto-Indo-European *weg?- (“wet”) related to English weaky.
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?hju?m?d/
Adjective
humid (comparative humider, superlative humidest)
- Containing perceptible moisture (usually describing air or atmosphere); damp; moist; somewhat wet or watery.
- Synonyms: damp, moist; see also Thesaurus:wet
- 1667 - John Milton, Paradise Lost (1667)
- Evening cloud, or humid bow.
Derived terms
- humidor
Related terms
- humidity
Translations
Further reading
- humid in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913.
- humid in The Century Dictionary, New York, N.Y.: The Century Co., 1911.
- humid at OneLook Dictionary Search
humid From the web:
- what humidity for cigars
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- what humidity should my house be
- what humidifier is best
- what humidity is best
- what humidity is considered dry
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- what humidity should house be in winter
drizzly
English
Etymology
drizzle +? -y
Adjective
drizzly (comparative drizzlier, superlative drizzliest)
- Abounding with drizzle; drizzling.
Translations
drizzly From the web:
- drizzly meaning
- drizzly what does it mean
- drizly app
- what does drizzly weather meaning
- drizly delivery fee
- drizly us
- what do drizzly mean
- how does drizly
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