soaker

  • 11soaker hose — /ˈsoʊkə hoʊz/ (say sohkuh hohz) noun a garden hose with small holes along its length to allow a steady flow of water under low pressure to reduce wastage …

  • 12Super Soaker — Type Water gun Inventor Lonnie Johnson Company …

    Wikipedia

  • 13Roller Soaker — Daten Standort Hersheypark (Hershey, Pennsylvania, USA) Typ …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 14Roller Soaker — Infobox roller coaster water soaker caption= location=Hersheypark section=Boardwalk type=Steel type2=Suspended type3= status=Operating opened=May 4 2002 manufacturer=Setpoint USA designer= model= track= lift=Chain lift hill height=70 drop= length …

    Wikipedia

  • 15Super Soaker — Eine Wasserpistole ist ein Spielzeug, mit dem Flüssigkeiten verspritzt werden können. Wasserpistole Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Design 2 Funktion 2.1 …

    Deutsch Wikipedia

  • 16soak — soaker, n. soakingly, adv. /sohk/, v.i. 1. to lie in and become saturated or permeated with water or some other liquid. 2. to pass, as a liquid, through pores, holes, or the like: The rain soaked through the tear in the umbrella. 3. to be… …

    Universalium

  • 17Water gun — A water gun (or water pistol, squirt gun, or water blaster) is a type of toy designed to shoot water. Together with water balloons, these devices are the primary tools used to soak another during a water warfare game. Historically, water guns… …

    Wikipedia

  • 18Nerf — For other uses, see Nerf (disambiguation). NERF Type Toy weapons, foam balls Inventor Reyn Guyer …

    Wikipedia

  • 19Visbreaker — A visbreaker is a processing unit in oil refinery whose purpose is to reduce the quantity of residual oil produced in the distillation of crude oil and to increase the yield of more valuable middle distillates (heating oil and diesel) by the… …

    Wikipedia

  • 20Visbreaking — Das Visbreaking (für Viscosity breaking, Reduktion der Viskosität) ist ein thermisches Crackverfahren, bei dem schwere Rückstände aus der Rohölverarbeitung (Vakuumrückstand, aber auch atmosphärischer Rückstand) unter Druck auf ca. 450 490 °C …

    Deutsch Wikipedia