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baby+bath

  • 1 bath

    1. plural - baths; noun
    1) (a large container for holding water in which to wash the whole body: I'll fill the bath with water for you.) vonia
    2) (an act of washing in a bath: I had a bath last night.) maudymasis
    3) (a container of liquid etc in which something is immersed: a bird bath.) baseinas
    2. verb
    (to wash in a bath: I'll bath the baby.) maudyti(s)
    - bathroom
    - bathtub

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > bath

  • 2 heat

    [hi:t] 1. noun
    1) (the amount of hotness (of something), especially of things which are very hot: Test the heat of the water before you bath the baby.) karštis
    2) (the warmth from something which is hot: The heat from the fire will dry your coat; the effect of heat on metal; the heat of the sun.) karštis
    3) (the hottest time: the heat of the day.) karštis, kaitra
    4) (anger or excitement: He didn't mean to be rude - he just said that in the heat of the moment.) įsikarščiavimas, užsidegimas, įkarštis
    5) (in a sports competition etc, one of two or more contests from which the winners go on to take part in later stages of the competition: Having won his heat he is going through to the final.) atrankinės/preliminarinės varžybos
    2. verb
    ((sometimes with up) to make or become hot or warm: We'll heat (up) the soup; The day heats up quickly once the sun has risen.) pašildyti, įšilti
    - heatedly
    - heatedness
    - heater
    - heating
    - heat wave
    - in/on heat
    See also:
    - hot

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > heat

  • 3 robe

    [rəub]
    1) ((often in plural) a long, loose piece of clothing: Many Arabs still wear robes; a baby's christening-robe.) ilgas platus drabužis
    2) ((usually in plural) a long, loose piece of clothing worn as a sign of a person's rank eg on official occasions: a judge's robes.) mantija, sutana
    3) ((especially American) a loose garment worn casually; a dressing-gown: She wore a robe over her nightdress; a bath-robe; a beach-robe.) palaida suknia, chalatas

    English-Lithuanian dictionary > robe

См. также в других словарях:

  • bath - bathe — ◊ bath In British English, a bath is a long rectangular container which you fill with water and sit in while you wash your body. The bathroom had two basins, a huge bath and more towels than I had ever seen. In American English, a container like… …   Useful english dictionary

  • bath — 1 noun plural baths (C) 1 BrE a large long container that you fill with water and sit in to wash yourself; bathtub especially AmE: run a bath (=make water flow into a bath) 2 an act of washing your body in a bath: After a week of camping, I… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • baby — noun ADJECTIVE ▪ new, newborn, tiny ▪ low birthweight, small, tiny ▪ Smoking in pregnancy increases the risk of producing a low birthweight baby. ▪ …   Collocations dictionary

  • bath water — also bathwater N UNCOUNT Your bath water is the water in which you sit or lie when you have a bath. to throw the baby out with the bath water → see baby He has to share his bath water with the other three children in the family …   English dictionary

  • bath — bath1 W3S2 [ba:θ US bæθ] n plural baths [ba:ðz, ba:θs US bæðz, bæθs] [: Old English; Origin: bAth] 1.) if you take a bath, you wash your body in a bath ▪ After a week of camping, I really needed a bath. take/have a bath ▪ I ll have a bath and go… …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Baby talk — This article is about speech directed at babies. For speech like sounds produced by babies, see babbling. For other uses, see Baby talk (disambiguation). Whoopsie daisy redirects here. For the song by Terri Walker, see L.O.V.E (album). Baby talk …   Wikipedia

  • bath — I UK [bɑːθ] / US [bæθ] noun [countable] Word forms bath : singular bath plural baths *** 1) British a long deep container that you fill with water and wash yourself in. The usual American word is bathtub. a) the water in a bath I relaxed in a… …   English dictionary

  • bath — {{Roman}}I.{{/Roman}} noun 1 (BrE) (also bathtub AmE, BrE) large container for washing your body ADJECTIVE ▪ free standing, sunken ▪ cast iron, tin VERB + BATH/BATHTUB …   Collocations dictionary

  • baby — n. & v. n. (pl. ies) 1 a very young child or infant, esp. one not yet able to walk. 2 an unduly childish person (is a baby about injections). 3 the youngest member of a family, team, etc. 4 (often attrib.) a a young or newly born animal. b a… …   Useful english dictionary

  • baby — [[t]be͟ɪbi[/t]] ♦♦ babies 1) N COUNT A baby is a very young child, especially one that cannot yet walk or talk. She used to take care of me when I was a baby... My wife has just had a baby... Claire had to dress her baby sister. 2) N COUNT: usu N …   English dictionary

  • baby — {{11}}baby (n.) late 14c., babi, dim. of baban (see BABE (Cf. babe) + Y (Cf. y) (3)). Meaning childish adult person is from c.1600. Meaning youngest of a group is from 1897. As a term of endearment for one s lover it is attested perhaps as early… …   Etymology dictionary

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