The difference between Bath and Cor

When used as nouns, bath means a tub or pool which is used for bathing: bathtub, whereas cor means various former units of volume, particularly: a hebrew unit of liquid volume, about equal to 230l or 60gallons. : approximately the same volume as a dry measure. a roughly equivalent phoenician unit of volume.


Bath is also verb with the meaning: to wash a person or animal in a bath.

Cor is also interjection with the meaning: ..

check bellow for the other definitions of Bath and Cor

  1. Bath as a noun:

    A tub or pool which is used for bathing: bathtub.

  2. Bath as a noun:

    A building or area where bathing occurs.

  3. Bath as a noun:

    The act of bathing.

  4. Bath as a noun:

    A substance or preparation in which something is immersed.

    Examples:

    "a bath of heated sand, ashes, steam, or hot air"

  1. Bath as a verb (transitive):

    To wash a person or animal in a bath

  1. Bath as a noun (historical, _, units of measure):

    A former Hebrew unit of liquid volume (about 23L or 6 gallons).

  1. Cor as a noun (historical, _, units of measure):

    Various former units of volume, particularly: A Hebrew unit of liquid volume, about equal to 230L or 60gallons. : approximately the same volume as a dry measure. A roughly equivalent Phoenician unit of volume.

Compare words: