Bathnoun
A tub or pool which is used for bathing: bathtub.
Bathnoun
A building or area where bathing occurs.
Bathnoun
The act of bathing.
Bathnoun
A substance or preparation in which something is immersed.
Bathnoun
A former Hebrew unit of liquid volume (about 23{{nbsp}}L or 6 gallons).
Bathverb
(transitive) To wash a person or animal in a bath
Bathnoun
The act of exposing the body, or part of the body, for purposes of cleanliness, comfort, health, etc., to water, vapor, hot air, or the like; as, a cold or a hot bath; a medicated bath; a steam bath; a hip bath.
Bathnoun
Water or other liquid for bathing.
Bathnoun
A receptacle or place where persons may immerse or wash their bodies in water.
Bathnoun
A building containing an apartment or a series of apartments arranged for bathing.
Bathnoun
A medium, as heated sand, ashes, steam, hot air, through which heat is applied to a body.
Bathnoun
A solution in which plates or prints are immersed; also, the receptacle holding the solution.
Bathnoun
A Hebrew measure containing the tenth of a homer, or five gallons and three pints, as a measure for liquids; and two pecks and five quarts, as a dry measure.
Bathnoun
A city in the west of England, resorted to for its hot springs, which has given its name to various objects.
Bathnoun
a vessel containing liquid in which something is immersed (as to process it or to maintain it at a constant temperature or to lubricate it);
Bathnoun
you soak your body in a bathtub;
Bathnoun
a relatively large open container that you fill with water and use to wash the body
Bathnoun
an ancient Hebrew liquid measure equal to about 10 gallons
Bathnoun
a town in southwestern England on the River Avon; famous for its hot springs and Roman remains
Bathnoun
a room (as in a residence) containing a bath or shower and usually a washbasin and toilet
Bathverb
clean one's body by immersion into water;
Pathnoun
A trail for the use of, or worn by, pedestrians.
Pathnoun
A course taken.
Pathnoun
(paganism) A Pagan tradition, for example witchcraft, Wicca, druidism, Heathenry.
Pathnoun
A metaphorical course.
Pathnoun
A method or direction of proceeding.
Pathnoun
(computing) A human-readable specification for a location within a hierarchical or tree-like structure, such as a file system or as part of a URL
Pathnoun
(graph theory) A sequence of vertices from one vertex to another using the arcs (edges). A path does not visit the same vertex more than once (unless it is a closed path, where only the first and the last vertex are the same).
Pathnoun
(topology) A continuous map f from the unit interval I = [0,1] to a topological space X.
Pathnoun
Pathology.
Pathverb
(transitive) To make a path in, or on (something), or for (someone).
Pathnoun
A trodden way; a footway.
Pathnoun
A way, course, or track, in which anything moves or has moved; route; passage; an established way; as, the path of a meteor, of a caravan, of a storm, of a pestilence. Also used figuratively, of a course of life or action.
Pathverb
To make a path in, or on (something), or for (some one).
Pathverb
To walk or go.
Pathnoun
a course of conduct;
Pathnoun
a way especially designed for a particular use
Pathnoun
an established line of travel or access
Pathnoun
a line or route along which something travels or moves;
Pathnoun
a way or track laid down for walking or made by continual treading
Pathnoun
the course or direction in which a person or thing is moving
Pathnoun
a course of action or way of achieving a specified result
Pathnoun
a schedule available for allocation to an individual railway train over a given route.
Pathnoun
a definition of the order in which an operating system or program searches for a file or executable program.
Pathverb
(chiefly in computing and railway contexts) allocate a path.