FromMiddle EnglishBathe, fromOld EnglishBaþan, from the dative case ofbæþ.
Bath
- Acity inBath and North East Somerset district,Somerset,England, famous for itsbaths fed by a hotspring.
- Avillage in theNetherlands.
- Avillage inNew Brunswick,Canada.
- A number of places in theUnited States:
- Avillage inIllinois.
- Anunincorporated community inIndiana.
- Acity, thecounty seat ofSagadahoc County,Maine; named for the city in England.
- Atown inNew Hampshire; named forWilliam Pulteney, 1st Earl of Bath.
- Atown andvillage, thecounty seat ofSteuben County,New York.
- Atown inNorth Carolina.
- Atown inOhio.
- Aborough inPennsylvania; named for the city in England.
- Alocality inSaint John parish,Barbados.
- Atown and mineral spring inSaint Thomas parish,Jamaica; named for the city in England.
- An Englishmarquisate.
- Asurname.
Nonstandard transliteration ofArabicبَعْث(baʕṯ,“resurrection”).
Bath
- Uncommon form ofBaath.
First attested asinsula de boestenbare dicta in 1235. Derived fromMiddle Dutchbat(“bathwater”). Originally a hydronym.
See alsoZealandicBat.
Bath n
- avillage and formermunicipality ofReimerswaal,Zeeland,Netherlands
- van Berkel, Gerard; Samplonius, Kees (2018), “Bath”, inNederlandse plaatsnamen verklaard[1] (in Dutch), Mijnbestseller.nl,→ISBN