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bathhouse

[ UK /bˈɑːθha‍ʊs/ ]
NOUN
  1. a building containing public baths
  2. a building containing dressing rooms for bathers

How To Use bathhouse In A Sentence

  • Will you walk with me into the bathhouse where we may hear ourselves talk above this fearful babble? CASCADES - THE DAY OF THE DEAD
  • From those smaller castellum, smaller lead pipes fed different bathhouses and the public fountains, and even smaller lead pipes ran to private homes. Flushed
  • The bathhouse would have contained a games room, sauna (sudatoria) and bathing halls and was built in AD 75.
  • There's the gym, the bathhouse, the police precinct, the batting cages.
  • At length a pleasant warmth and a few wisps of steam seeped around the rubber sheets, giving the place the atmosphere of a bathhouse. ANTI-ICE
  • Wealthy families of the period incorporated bathhouses into their mansions.
  • Now Budapest has over a dozen public bathhouses, offering thermal, Turkish and mud baths, with a vigorous east European massage thrown in for a few extra florins.
  • Fear that house that is called the bathhouse and if any enter therein, let him veil himself. Christianity and Islam
  • Often driven by drugs, the semi-public theatre-of-the-flesh that unfolded in bars and bathhouses unleashed creative energy and drove cultural change - if you buy Moore's thesis.
  • Drains were built that ran from the bathhouse, the prior’s rooms, the roofs, and then under the reredorter, taking the wastewater out of the monastery’s grounds. Flushed
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