Placing the object on the board, they ran the clothing up and down the board fast (While plunging it in the water). This removed any dirt or grime on the clothing. Then they wrung it out and hung it outside to dry.
the cleaned it in buckets by the river.
In Cold Water. I searched this on Google and had 5 agreeing with me and i only searched a page!
The past perfect of the verb 'wash' is had washed.
yes, medieval people did wash what they ate off.
the past perfect of "washed" is "have washed"
Electricity.
a peice of wood that u use to wash clothes
Possible you may mean wash BOARD. This was a wood and metal or wood and glass device used to wash clothes by hand. The wash board was placed in a tub of soapy water, and had a rippled surface. Dirty clothes were placed in the water, and scrubbed against the rippled surface to release dirt.
The clothes have friction with the other clothes so that makes static electricity. The static lets the clothes stick, as a balloon sticks to a wall when you rub it on your hair.
You wash them the day before the date.
Spray VaporRemed on clothes to remove odor first before machine wash.
Tudors wash their clothes with wee
yes but you have to wash the clothes in the toilet
During the exodus they did get to wash their clothes. The Jews did not get to wash theirs.
In the days before washing machines, a washboard was used when hand washing clothes. It was a corrugated surface used to help scrub the clothes after they were soaked in soapy water. The device is not widely used today, although some of them are used as rhythm instruments in old country-style bands - sometimes called wash tub bands.
You should always wash the baby clothes before you use them. Babies are sensitive to fabrics that are unwashed. You can use baby detergent.
wash clothes with water thoroughly