Синоними & Анаграми | Английски дума BATH
BATH
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- Mouthwash, mouth rinse, oral rinse, or mouth bath is a liquid which is held in the mouth passively or swirled around the mouth by contraction of the perioral muscles and/or movement of the head, and may be gargled, where the head is tilted back and the liquid bubbled at the back of the mouth.
- He had four plays running simultaneously on Broadway in 1920, namely "The Gold Diggers," "The Bat" and "Spanish Love" and "Ladies' Night (In a Turkish Bath)".
- The site sprawls over an estimated ; among the few structures remaining today are a ruined bath, an odeon, a theatre, gymnasium complex and a recently uncovered stadion.
- However, the water bath was known many centuries earlier (Hippocrates and Theophrastus), and the balneum Mariae attributed to Mary the Jewess was used to heat its contents above , while the bain-marie that continues to be used today only heats its contents up to a gentle heat of less than.
- The most common method is hot-dip galvanizing, in which the parts are coated by submerging them in a bath of hot, molten zinc.
- He was educated at Kingswood School, Bath, Somerset, and then at the Central Technical College in South Kensington.
- Abbot was born in Chelsea just outside London, and made his first appearance on the stage at Bath in 1806, and his first London appearance in 1808, at the Haymarket Theatre, in a benefit performance.
- He has her taken from the capital of Ravenna to a small island on Lake Bolsena, where she is strangled in her bath.
- Raginpert's son Aripert captures Liutpert at his capital in Pavia, and will have him strangled in his bath.
- July 15 – Emperor Constans II is killed under mysterious circumstances in his bath, during a mutiny at Syracuse.
- April 11 – Emperor Romanos III (Argyros) is drowned in his bath, at the urging of his wife Zoë, who marries her chamberlain, and elevates him to the throne of the Byzantine Empire, as Michael IV.
- The county is in the West of England combined authority area, which includes the Greater Bristol area (eleventh most populous urban area in the United Kingdom) and nearby places such as Bath.
- In the 17th century, claims were made for the curative properties of water from the springs, and Bath became popular as a spa town in the Georgian era.
- John Joseph Coughlin (August 15, 1860 – November 11, 1938), known as "Bathhouse John" or "the Bath", was an American politician who served as alderman of Chicago's 1st ward from 1892 until his death.
- Later, Fausta, second wife of Constantine I, is also executed by being suffocated or boiled in a hot bath.
- This ship is the 31st destroyer of her class and the 18th ship of the class to be built at Bath Iron Works in Bath, Maine.
- The contract to build Hawes was awarded to Bath Iron Works, Bath, Maine, 22 May 1981, and her keel was laid 26 August 1983.
- After Bath (101,557), the largest settlements are Weston-super-Mare (82,418), Taunton (60,479), and Yeovil (49,698).
- Cities and large towns in the region include Bath, Bristol, Bournemouth, Cheltenham, Exeter, Gloucester, Plymouth and Swindon.
- He won numerous awards, held the esteem of George III, and examples of his works adorn St Paul's Cathedral and Westminster Abbey in London, Christ Church, Oxford, Pembroke College, Oxford, Bath Abbey and Bristol Cathedral.
- In such a way, one finds explanations about the origin of the heavenly bodies (Sun and Moon, but also Venus, the Pleiades, the Milky Way); the mountain landscape; clouds, rain, thunder and lightning; wild and tame animals; the colors of the maize; diseases and their curative herbs; agricultural instruments; the steam bath, etc.
- The Bath Club and Portland Club met in 1908 and issued a super-set of rules for Bridge that covered the bidding and penalty for failing to make a contract in Auction Bridge.
- It is the closest town to the Glastonbury Festival and nearby the Royal Bath and West of England Society showground.
- The stars have eight points, unlike the four pointed Order of the Bath stars used by the army (which are often referred to as "pips").
- After the death of Edward IV of England in 1483 it was claimed by Robert Stillington, Bishop of Bath and Wells, that she was legally married precontract to Edward, which invalidated the king's later marriage to Elizabeth Woodville.
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(Английски) Google Answers
(Английски) Britannica
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(Български) Wiktionary
(Български) Wikipedia
(Английски) Wiktionary
(Английски) Google Answers
(Английски) Britannica
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