- The
Victorian Turkish bath is a type of
bath in
which the
bather sweats freely in hot dry
air, is then washed,
often m****aged, and has a cold wash or...
-
Bath (RP: /bɑːθ/;
local pronunciation: [ba(ː)θ]) is a city in the
ceremonial county of Somerset, England,
known for and
named after its Roman-built baths...
-
intakes of
internal combustion engines and
air compressors tend to use
either paper, foam, or
cotton filters. Oil
bath filters have
fallen out of
favour aside...
- The Most
Honourable Order of the
Bath is a
British order of
chivalry founded by King
George I on 18 May 1725. The name
derives from an
elaborate medieval...
- the heat in the
bath. An
exception are
baths in Okinawa,
where the
climate is
warmer and
there is no need to keep the hot
air in the
bath. Sentō in Okinawa...
-
Turkish bath is a
generic term
historically used to
connote both
steam baths, and hot-
air baths which use dry
air. It has also been
inaccurately used...
-
Another use of an oil
bath is to
filter particulates out of
air, by
leading the
air stream through an
unheated oil
bath. This type of
air filter was used in...
- The term
Bath Blitz refers to the
air raids by the
German Luftwaffe on the
British city of
Bath, Somerset,
during World War II. The city was
bombed in...
- disorders. The idea of the
therapeutic unclothed air-
bath, was
connected with that of the light-
bath, in the
early 20th century, for
example by the pastor...
- openluchtbad/openluchtzwembad (open
air bath) or
buitenbad (outdoor
bath). Smith,
Janet (2006).
Liquid ****ets: the
lidos and open
air swimming pools of Britain...