Bath & body works ม สาขาไหนบ าง เซ นเตอร

Bath & body works ม สาขาไหนบ าง เซ นเตอร
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  • 55 Front St. Bath, Maine 04530 Mon-Thu: 7:30 am-12:00 pm 1:00 pm- 5:30 pm Contact Us

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Built for pleasure and relaxation, beautiful Bath has been a wellbeing destination since Roman times. The waters are still a big draw today, both at the ancient Roman Baths and the thoroughly modern Thermae Bath Spa, which houses the only natural thermal hot springs in Britain you can bathe in.

Bath’s compact, visitor-friendly centre is overflowing with places to eat and drink, plus some of the finest independent shops in Britain, making it the ideal city break. Immerse yourself in Bath’s remarkable collection of museums and galleries, and enjoy year-round festivals, theatre, music and sport.

Bath's stunning, honey-coloured Georgian architecture is straight from a Jane Austen novel; highlights include the iconic Royal Crescent and the majestic Circus. There’s plenty to see beyond the city, too, with beautiful Somerset countryside to explore, as well as attractions including Stonehenge, Avebury, Castle Combe, and Longleat Safari Park.

a device for controlling the temperature of something by the use of a surrounding medium, as sand, water, oil, etc.

  • Metallurgy.
  • the depressed hearth of a steelmaking furnace.
  • the molten metal being made into steel in a steelmaking furnace.
  • the state of being covered by a liquid, as perspiration: in a bath of sweat.

verb (used with or without object),bathed, bath·ing.Chiefly British.

  1. to wash or soak in a bath.

Idioms about bath

  1. take a bath, Informal. to suffer a large financial loss: Many investors are taking a bath on their bond investments.

Origin of bath

1

First recorded before 900; Middle English noun bath, beth, beath, Old English bæth; cognate with Old Frisian beth, Old Saxon, Old Norse bath, German Bad; from Germanic bátha-n “what is warmed,” from a root meaning “to warm”

Other words from bath

  • bathless, adjective

Words Nearby bath

  • Bateson
  • BATF
  • batfish
  • batfowl
  • bat girl
  • bath
  • Bath and North East Somerset
  • Bat Hayil
  • Bath bun
  • Bath chair
  • Bath chap

Other definitions for bath (2 of 3)


noun

  1. a Hebrew unit of liquid measure, equal to a quantity varying between 10 and 11 U.S. gallons (38 and 42 liters).

Origin of bath

2

First recorded in 1350–1400; Middle English bath(us), batus, from Latin batus, from Greek bátos, from Hebrew bath

Other definitions for Bath (3 of 3)


noun

  1. a city in Avon, in SW England: mineral springs.
  2. a seaport in SW Maine.

Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023

How to use bath in a sentence

  • Facing muggy race conditions in Qatar of 88 degrees Fahrenheit with 75 percent humidity, the Canadian 50K racewalker spent ten minutes in an ice bath shortly before the race, then donned an ice towel while waiting for the start.
  • There’s this stigma toward fathers that we shouldn’t be as loving or sing to our children or get them to bed or give them baths.
  • How hot the bath—and the bathroom—should beThe meta analysis from 2019 zeroed in on 104 to 109 degrees Fahrenheit as a temperature range that improves sleep quality.
  • People who regularly take baths seem to have lower stress levels and be less depressed than people who just shower.
  • No matter what shape your skin is in, sealing in the moisture of a bath is always a good thing.
  • Then I see all those couples quarreling in Bed, bath, and Beyond.
  • You can not see anything in there, until it magically emerges in the developing bath.
  • It was now safely back in its cage, although the chancellor sometimes let it play in the bath, he said.
  • Wikipedia has an entire entry on medicinal clays, though many are of the mud-bath variety.
  • Just yesterday I claimed a local deli, a small poodle and a Bed, bath and Beyond.
  • But some one, perhaps it was Robert, thought of a bath at that mystic hour and under that mystic moon.
  • Then said Nqong from his bath in the salt-pan, "Come and ask me about it to-morrow, because I'm going to wash."
  • When partially exhausted the aluminum shutters are dipped into a bath of shellac.
  • Enjoying the keen physical pleasure of it, he thought what a wholly delightful thing was a hot bath after a day's hard hunting.
  • With a desperate effort of the will he hurled himself out of the bath and threw open the window.

British Dictionary definitions for bath (1 of 4)


nounplural baths (bɑːðz)

  1. a large container, esp one made of enamelled iron or plastic, used for washing or medically treating the body: Related adjective: balneal
  2. the act or an instance of washing in such a container
  1. the amount of liquid contained in a bath
  2. run a bath to turn on the taps to fill a bath with water for bathing oneself
  3. (usually plural) a place that provides baths or a swimming pool for public use
  4. * a vessel in which something is immersed to maintain it at a constant temperature, to process it photographically, electrolytically, etc, or to lubricate it
    • the liquid used in such a vessel

verb

  1. British to wash in a bath

Origin of bath

1

Old English bæth; compare Old High German bad, Old Norse bath; related to Swedish basa to clean with warm water, Old High German bāen to warm

British Dictionary definitions for bath (2 of 4)


noun

  1. an ancient Hebrew unit of liquid measure equal to about 8.3 Imperial gallons or 10 US gallons

Origin of bath

2

Hebrew

British Dictionary definitions for Bath (3 of 4)


noun

  1. a city in SW England, in Bath and North East Somerset unitary authority, Somerset, on the River Avon: famous for its hot springs; a fashionable spa in the 18th century; Roman remains, notably the baths; university (1966). Pop: 90 144 (2001): Latin name: Aquae Sulis (ˈækwiːˈsuːlɪs)

British Dictionary definitions for Ba'th (4 of 4)


noun

  1. an Arab Socialist party, esp in Iraq and Syria, founded by Michel Aflaq in 1941. It attempts to combine Marxism with pan-Islamic nationalism

Origin of Ba'th

4

C20: from Arabic: resurgence

Derived forms of Ba'th

  • Bathi, adjective
  • Bathism, noun
  • Bathist, noun

Collins English Dictionary - Complete & Unabridged 2012 Digital Edition © William Collins Sons & Co. Ltd. 1979, 1986 © HarperCollins Publishers 1998, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012

Other Idioms and Phrases with bath


see take a bath; throw out the baby with the bath water.

The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary Copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.

Did you bath or bathe?

When you take a bath, it means you wash yourself in a tub of water. The verb form (for Americans) is to bathe. In British English, bath is also a verb—one baths . For Brits, to bathe means to swim or to pour liquid on something.

What is the difference between bathe and bath?

The word 'bath' is used to refer to a large container/tub used to wash oneself or it is the act of cleaning oneself with soap and water. The word 'bathe' means to cleanse oneself with water and soap. It is used as a noun and a verb. It can also be used as a verb.

How often should you take a bath?

There's no one-size-fits-all answer to this question. Many doctors say a daily shower is fine for most people. (More than that could start to cause skin problems.) But for many people, two to three times a week is enough and may be even better to maintain good health.

What is the bath known for?

Welcome to the city of Bath, World Heritage Site. Famous worldwide for its imposing architecture and Roman remains, Bath is a vibrant city with over 40 museums, good restaurants, quality shopping and theatres.