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Shower bath   /ʃˈaʊər bæθ/   Listen
noun
Shower  n.  
1.
A fall or rain or hail of short duration; sometimes, but rarely, a like fall of snow. "In drought or else showers." "Or wet the thirsty earth with falling showers."
2.
That which resembles a shower in falling or passing through the air copiously and rapidly. "With showers of stones he drives them far away."
3.
A copious supply bestowed. (R.) "He and myself Have travail'd in the great shower of your gifts."
Shower bath, a bath in which water is showered from above, and sometimes from the sides also.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Shower bath" Quotes from Famous Books



... in brandishing it around his head and trying to escape the falling water. He escapes about twice out of three times and must now be a perfect drowned rat. (I have just had him in to look at him and he is even more of a drowned rat than I supposed. He has gone out to complete his shower bath under strict promise that immediately afterwards he will go ...
— Letters to His Children • Theodore Roosevelt

... substitute for the bath-room is a large piece of oil-cloth, which can be laid upon the floor of an ordinary dressing-room. Upon this may be placed the bath tub or basin, or a person may use it to stand upon while taking a sponge bath. The various kinds of baths, both hot and cold, are the shower bath, the douche, the hip bath ...
— Our Deportment - Or the Manners, Conduct and Dress of the Most Refined Society • John H. Young

... last few minutes. In the most ridiculous way David, after his shower bath, messed round with a shaving brush and a piece of soap, trying to get a lather on his face. Randall saw it first, and with roars of laughter called our attention to him. Corder, who instantly understood, quietly twinkled; but Knudsen wrinkled his brow ...
— At Plattsburg • Allen French

... on a sliding framework. This framework was then pushed into the oven and the clothes were thoroughly baked. We did not let our boots, belts, or braces go, as the heat would spoil the leather. We then walked out into the next room and had a shower bath, and after that went into the third room at the other side of the oven, and waited until the framework was pushed through to us, when we took our clothes from the ...
— Three Times and Out • Nellie L. McClung



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