showerhead
IPA: ʃˈaʊɝhɛd
noun
- A perforated nozzle that showers water on a bather, sometimes in adjustable patterns.
- A part of a coffeemaker for dispersing water evenly over the grounds.
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Examples of "showerhead" in Sentences
- And she's never used it, and her showerhead leaks.
- I face the door no matter where the showerhead is.
- For a normal aerated showerhead, there is a hole with just one screen.
- In 1965 many baths also added showerheads to the faucets in the baths.
- Then by accident, Conan turns on the water and the showerhead comes on.
- He steps into the shower, takes off his belt and ties it to the showerhead.
- An improvement of a power controlling apparatus is included in a showerhead.
- A basin fits snugly around said showerhead to optionally provide a sitz bath.
- But in May, the DOE said a "showerhead" may incorporate "one or more sprays, nozzles or openings."
- The very large in-glassed, completely tiled shower with a 9-inch rain showerhead reminded me of home.
- If your showerhead has seen better days, install a new low-flow showerhead, which is an easy DIY job.
- The showerhead was the cheap, single-setting kind that you find in high school gyms, prisons, and Army barracks
- For years, the term "showerhead" in federal regulations was understood by many manufacturers to mean a device that directs water onto a bather.
- These sites include water - saving tips such as showerhead information, rainwater harvesting tips, how to wash your car with minimal water, lawn irrigation, home water saving tips, etc.
- In May, the DOE stunned the plumbing-products industry when it said it would adopt a strict definition of the term "showerhead" in enforcing standards that have been on the books but largely unenforced for nearly 20 years.
- In May, the DOE stunned the plumbing-products industry when it said it would adopt a strict definition of the term "showerhead" in enforcing standards that have been on the books-but largely unenforced-for nearly 20 years.
- Wall Street Journal reports that "In May, the DOE stunned the plumbing-products industry when it said it would adopt a strict definition of the term" showerhead "in enforcing standards that have been on the books -- but largely unenforced -- for nearly 20 years."