Just like that. The word "vacuum" is the spelling for a void, or emptiness. The "vacuum cleaner" uses a fan to provide lower air pressure at its nozzle, so as to trap dirt caught in the airflow.
That is the correct spelling of the word "vacuuming".
vacume
The latin word vacuum is 'le vide' in French. A vacuum cleaner is 'un aspirateur'
The plural is vacuums. (could be vacuum cleaners, or separate situations of a vacuum)
The answers here may occassionally reflect juvenile, adolescent attempts at humor, which inevitably connect "vacuum" with vacuum cleaners and the word "suck".(The answer was later edited.)
The correct spelling is vacuum (an empty void, or a suction cleaning device).
It is spelled vacuum.Vacuum.
The word "vacuum" is the spelling for a void, or emptiness. The "vacuum cleaner" uses a fan to provide lower air pressure at its nozzle, so as to trap dirt caught in the airflow.
The spelling is "thermos" (still a trademark name Thermos), a vacuum-insulated flask.
If something is changing into something else, the word is "become". If you're referring to an electric cleaning device, it's "vacuum".
In fact, I've never seen anyone spell 'vacuum' as 'vacumn'. But if someone does, it is a spelling error. The correct form is 'vacuum' only. Maybe this mispelling happens because of the way the word is spoken (it sounds like an 'm' or 'n' in the end).
The slang term "vac" normally means "vacuum" as in vacuum cleaner.The acronym VAC may mean "volts AC."In literary use, VAC means single vowel and consonant in an accented ending syllable.The abbreviation vac. may mean "vacant."The text-speak VAC stands for "vultures are circling."
why are vacuum flasks called vacuum flask
Because it has a vacuum.