VERB
If you
bathe
in a sea, river, or lake, you swim, play, or wash yourself in it. Birds and animals can also
bathe
. [mainly BRIT
, FORMAL
] □ [V
prep/adv]
The police have warned the city's inhabitants not to bathe in the polluted river.
[Also V
] ● N‑SING
Bathe
is also a noun. □
Fifty soldiers were taking an early morning bathe in a nearby lake.
●
bath|ing
N‑UNCOUNT
□
Nude bathing is not allowed.
2
VERB
When you
bathe
, you have a bath. [AM
, also BRIT
, FORMAL
] □ [V
]
At least 60% of us now bathe or shower once a day.
3
VERB
If you
bathe
someone, especially a child, you wash them in a bath. [AM
, also BRIT
, FORMAL
] □ [V
n]
Back home, Shirley plays with, feeds and bathes the baby.
4
VERB
If you
bathe
a part of your body or a wound, you wash it gently or soak it in a liquid. □ [V
n]
Bathe the infected area in a salt solution.
5
VERB
If a place
is bathedin
light, it is covered with light, especially a gentle, pleasant light. □ [be
V
-ed + in
]
The arena was bathed in warm sunshine.
□ [V
n + in
]
The lamp behind him seems to bathe him in warmth.
[Also V
n]
6
→ see also
sunbathe
bathed
/be
I
ðd/
1
ADJ
If someone is
bathedin
sweat, they are sweating a great deal. □ [+ in
]
Chantal was writhing in pain and bathed in perspiration.
2
ADJ
If someone is
bathedin
a particular emotion such as love, they feel it constantly in a pleasant way. [LITERARY
] □ [+ in
]
…a physical sensation of being bathed in love.
bath|er
/be
I
ðə
r
/ (bathers
) N‑COUNT
A
bather
is a person who is swimming in the sea, or in a river or lake. [mainly BRIT
, FORMAL
]
bath|house
/bɑː
θhaʊs/ (bathhouses
) also
bath house
N‑COUNT
A
bathhouse
is a public or private building containing baths, and often other facilities such as a sauna.
bath|ing cos|tume
/be
I
ð
I
ŋ kɒstjuːm, [AM
] -tuːm/ (bathing costumes
) N‑COUNT
A
bathing costume
is a piece of clothing that is worn for swimming, especially by women and girls. [BRIT
, OLD-FASHIONED
]
bath|ing suit
/be
I
ð
I
ŋ suːt/ (bathing suits
) N‑COUNT
A
bathing suit
is a piece of clothing which people wear when they go swimming. [OLD-FASHIONED
]
bath|ing trunks
/be
I
ð
I
ŋ trʌŋks/ N‑PLURAL
Bathing trunks
are shorts that a man wears when he goes swimming. [OLD-FASHIONED
]
bath|mat
/bɑː
θmæt, bæ
θ-/ (bathmats
) also
bath mat
N‑COUNT
A
bathmat
is a mat which you stand on while you dry yourself after getting out of the bath.
ba|thos
/be
I
θɒs/ N‑UNCOUNT
In literary criticism,
bathos
is a sudden change in speech or writing from a serious or important subject to a ridiculous or very ordinary one. [TECHNICAL
]
bath|robe
/bɑː
θroʊb/ (bathrobes
)
1
N‑COUNT
A
bathrobe
is a loose piece of clothing made of the same material as towels. You wear it before or after you have a bath or a swim.
2
N‑COUNT
A
bathrobe
is a
dressing gown
.
bath|room
◆◇◇ /bɑː
θruːm, bæ
θ-/ (bathrooms
)
1
N‑COUNT
A
bathroom
is a room in a house that contains a bath or shower, a washbasin, and sometimes a toilet.
2
N‑SING
A
bathroom
is a room in a house or public building that contains a toilet. [AM
] □
She had gone in to use the bathroom.
in BRIT, usually use toilet
3
PHRASE
People say that they
are going to the bathroom
when they want to say that they are going to use the toilet. [POLITENESS
]
ba
th tow|el
(
bath towels
) N‑COUNT
A
bath towel
is a very large towel used for drying your body after you have had a bath.
bath|tub
/bɑː
θtʌb, bæ
θ-/ (bathtubs
) N‑COUNT
A
bathtub
is a long, usually rectangular container which you fill with water and sit in to wash your body. [AM
]
in BRIT, use bath
ba
th wa|ter
also
bathwater
N‑UNCOUNT
Your
bath water
is the water in which you sit or lie when you have a bath.
ba|tik
/bətiː
k, bæ
t
I
k/ (batiks
)
1
N‑UNCOUNT
Batik
is a process for printing designs on cloth. Wax is put on those areas of the cloth that you do not want to be coloured by dye. □
…batik bedspreads.
2
N‑VAR
A
batik
is a cloth which has been printed with a batik design. □
…batik from Bali.