1. fog - Noun
2. fog - Verb
A second growth of grass; aftergrass.
Dead or decaying grass remaining on land through the winter; -- called also foggage.
To pasture cattle on the fog, or aftergrass, of; to eat off the fog from.
Watery vapor condensed in the lower part of the atmosphere and disturbing its transparency. It differs from cloud only in being near the ground, and from mist in not approaching so nearly to fine rain. See Cloud.
A state of mental confusion.
To envelop, as with fog; to befog; to overcast; to darken; to obscure.
To show indistinctly or become indistinct, as the picture on a negative sometimes does in the process of development.
Source: Webster's dictionaryTechnology is so much fun but we can drown in our technology. The fog of information can drive out knowledge. Daniel J. Boorstin
The fog comeson little cat feet. It sits looking overharbor and cityon silent haunchesand then moves on. Carl Sandburg
It is not the clear-sighted who rule the world. Great achievements are accomplished in a blessed, warm fog. Joseph Conrad
Love is like fog - there is no mountain on which it does not rest. Hawaiian Proverb
The wolf loves the fog. Albanian Proverb
He disappeared like a grey donkey in the fog. Hungarian Proverb