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bath
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
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English
Pronunciation
- enPR: bäth, IPA(key): /bɑːθ/
- (Received Pronunciation, General South African) IPA(key): [bɑːθ]
- (North India) IPA(key): [bäːt̪ʰ]
- (South India) IPA(key): [bäːt̪]
- (General Australian, New Zealand) IPA(key): /bɐːθ/
- enPR: băth, IPA(key): /bæθ/
Audio (US): (file) - Rhymes: -ɑːθ, -æθ
- Homophone: barf (non-rhotic, trap–bath split, th-fronting)
Etymology 1
Etymology tree
From Middle English bath, baþ, from Old English bæþ (“bath”), from Proto-West Germanic *baþ, from Proto-Germanic *baþą (“bath”), from Proto-Indo-European *bʰeh₁- (“to warm”). Corresponding inherited verbs are beath and bathe.
Noun
bath (plural baths)
- A tub or pool which is used for bathing: bathtub.
- A building or area where bathing occurs.
- 1842, Joseph Gwilt, Encyclopaedia of Architecture:
- Among the ancients, the public baths were of amazing extent and magnificence.
- (real estate, informal) Clipping of bathroom.
- The master bath has two sinks.
- The act of bathing; an instance of this; the taking of a bath.
- 1961, Harry E. Wedeck, Dictionary of Aphrodisiacs, New York: The Citadel Press, page 156:
- Radio-active baths are said to act favourably in a sexual direction. So too with arsenical springs, cold water treatment, and hydrotherapy.
- The body of liquid one bathes in.
- (by extension) A substance or preparation in which something is immersed.
- a bath of heated sand, ashes, steam, or hot air
- 1879, Th Du Moncel, The Telephone, the Microphone and the Phonograph, Harper, page 166:
- He takes the prepared charcoal used by artists, brings it to a white heat, and suddenly plunges it in a bath of mercury, of which the globules instantly penetrate the pores of charcoal, and may be said to metallize it.
Usage notes
- Sense 4 is usually to take a bath (US) or to have a bath (UK, General Australian). See also Appendix:Collocations of do, have, make, and take.
Synonyms
- bain (obsolete)
Derived terms
- aerotone bath
- afterbath
- air-bath
- air bath
- bath bomb
- bath book
- bath-brush
- bath chair
- Bath County
- bath cube
- bath dodger
- bathe
- bathful
- bath-house
- bathinette
- bathkeeper
- bath kimono
- bathless
- bathlike
- bath-man
- bathman
- bath man
- bath mat
- bath pearl
- bathplug
- bathrobe
- bath room
- bathroom
- bath salt
- bath salts
- bath scraper
- bath sheet
- bath sponge
- bath time
- bathtime
- bath towel
- bath tub
- bathtub
- bathward
- bathwards
- bathware
- bath water
- bathwater
- bathwear
- bed bath
- bed-bath
- bird bath, birdbath
- bitch bath
- blanket bath
- blood bath
- bloodbath
- bubble bath
- catbath
- compressed-air bath
- corner bath
- couldn't run a bath
- cryobath
- draw a bath
- dust bath
- dyebath
- early bath
- earth bath
- electric bath
- eyebath
- firebath
- fire-bath
- foam bath
- foot bath
- foot-bath
- footbath
- gannet's bath, gannets' bath
- gong bath
- half bath
- half-bath
- have a bath
- hip bath
- hydrobath
- ice bath
- intrabath
- Matlock Bath
- monobath
- moonbath
- mud bath
- myobath
- Nauheim bath
- negative bath
- oilbath, oil bath
- plunge bath
- postbath
- powder bath
- prebath
- Roman bath
- run a bath
- Russian bath
- sand bath
- shath
- shower bath
- showerbath
- silver bath
- sitz bath
- sound bath
- spa bath
- spin bath
- spit bath
- sponge bath
- starbath
- steam bath
- sulfur bath
- sulphur bath
- sun-bath
- sunbath
- sun bath
- swan's bath
- swimming bath
- take a bath
- throw out the baby with the bath water
- throw the baby out with the bath water
- tin bath
- tongue-bath
- tongue bath
- trap-bath split
- Turkish bath
- ultrasonic bath
- vapour bath
- water bath
- water-bath
- whore bath
- whore's bath
Descendants
Translations
tub
|
building or area where bathing occurs
|
real estate: bathroom — see also bathroom
|
act of bathing
|
Verb
bath (third-person singular simple present baths, present participle bathing, simple past and past participle bathed)
- (transitive, Commonwealth) To wash a person or animal in a bath.
- 1990, Mukti Jain Campion, The Baby Challenge: A handbook on pregnancy for women with a physical disability., →ISBN, page 41:
- Somewhere to bath the baby: don't invest in a plastic baby bath. The bathroom handbasin is usually a much more convenient place to bath the baby. If your partner is more able, this could be a task he might take on as his, bathing the baby in a basin or plastic bown on the floor.
- 2006, Sue Dallas, Diana North, Joanne Angus, Grooming Manual for the Dog and Cat, →ISBN, page 91:
- For grooming at home, obviously the choice is yours whether you wish to bath the dog in your own bath or sink, or if you want to buy one specifically for the purpose.
- 2007, Robin Barker, Baby Love, →ISBN, page 179:
- If you find bathing stressfull during the first six weeks, only bath your baby once or twice a week.
- (intransitive, informal, Commonwealth) To bathe (oneself); to have a bath.
- 1815, anonymous author, The Observant Pedestrian Mounted, volume 3:
- “Oh, dear no, not me; I never bath, ’tis the cat has been bathing, in a warm sea bath; I’ll tell you how I manage: I bought a large pickle-jar, and so I have it filled every morning with hot sea water, proportionate to the thermometerical heat my finger can bear, and that I stile Tink-a-tink’s bath; in which I immerge him all but his head, for a quarter of an hour; and he looks so pretty, and receives so much benefit, you would be surprised.”
- 1912, James Ward, quotee, “Report on the Royal Commission on Mines”, in Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives of New Zealand, Wellington, page 141:
- A man's home may be handy to the mine, in which case he would not need to lose the bath, but if he lived any distance away he would bath at the mine.
- 2007, “Doctors, Regeneration, and the Revolutionary Crucible, 1789-1804”, in Sean M. Quinlan, The Great Nation in Decline (The History of Medicine in Context), Aldershot: Ashgate, →ISBN, page 140:
- In a flight of fancy, Millot even wanted to create public bath houses alongside the Seine, so young children could bath in the river’s healthful waters.
- 2017 February 9, “Very Early Spring”, in Jean A. Stockdale, My Spring: Royal Times and Ordinary Lives, Troubador Publishing, →ISBN, page 17:
- Parents would bath after all the children had gone to bed or older children sent into the front room.
Translations
to wash in a bath
|
to bathe — see bathe
Etymology 2
Noun
bath (plural baths)
Meronyms
Translations
unit of liquid volume
|
References
- "Weights and Measures" at Oxford Biblical Studies Online
Anagrams
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Cornish
Etymology 1
Uncertain; possibly from Proto-Celtic *batto-. Cognate with Welsh bath.
Noun
bath m (plural bathow)
Derived terms
- batha (“to mint”)
- bathva (“mint (building)”)
Etymology 2
Noun
bath m (plural bathys)
Derived terms
- badhya (“to bathe”)
Mutation
Note: Certain mutated forms of some words can never occur in standard Cornish.
All possible mutated forms are displayed for convenience.
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French
Etymology
From English proper noun Bath where this paper was originally made.
Pronunciation
Noun
bath m (plural baths)
Adjective
bath (plural baths)
Further reading
- “bath”, in Trésor de la langue française informatisé [Digitized Treasury of the French Language], 2012.
Middle English
Etymology 1
Etymology tree
Inherited from Old English bæþ, from Proto-West Germanic *baþ, from Proto-Germanic *baþą.
Alternative forms
Pronunciation
Noun
bath (plural bathes or (early) baðen)
- A bath (body of liquid for bathing):
- A bathhouse; a place for bathing.
- A bathing (process of having a bath)
Related terms
Descendants
References
- “bath, n.”, in MED Online, Ann Arbor, Mich.: University of Michigan, 2007, retrieved 16 July 2018.
Etymology 2
Determiner
bath
- (Northern) alternative form of bothe (“both”)
Pronoun
bath
- (Northern) alternative form of bothe (“both”)
Conjunction
bath
- (Northern) alternative form of bothe (“both”)
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Welsh
Yola
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