The end of the hose itself usually has a threaded connection - so that would be a "screw". If you have a spray nozzle that is lever-operated, you'd have a "lever" at the end of your hose.
The rope of a clothesline is wrapped around two pulleys which are simple machines.
It is not a simple machine
wheel and axle.
Moveable pulley
Any garden hose that is sufficiently thick with a metal end should be fine for regular use.
lever
Water moves faster as pressure behind it rises. This may be illustrated by a simple garden hose, water will pour out of the hose end at a set rate, but when you put a finger over the end, thus raising pressure, the water will squirt out with greater intensity.
Siphon it out. You can create a siphon by either sucking really hard on one end of the garden hose while the other end is under water, or the easier way, with 2 garden hoses as follows: -Get 2 garden hoses. Hook one to the spigot, put it in the pool and turn it on. set the other hose up with one end in the pool, and the other wherever you want to drain the water to. -Hold the ends of the 2 hoses that are in the pool, together with your hands, so the spigot water runs through the 2nd hose. Pull them apart, and you will feel the suction pulling the water out of your pool through the empty hose. -Take the hose that is connected to the spigot, out of your pool, and turn the spigot off. -Make sure the other garden hose does not fall out of the pool, or you will lose suction and have to start all over again! -When you get towards the bottom, you will have to physically hold the hose and move it around to get the water out without losing suction. You have to have the end of the hose that the water is running out of below the level of the bottom of the pool. You can do it with on.y one hose. Put one end of the hose in the pool and connect the other end to the faucet and turn it on until the air is forced from the hose. If the faucet is below the pool just disconnect the hose and lay it on the ground. You can move it around as long as the end of the hos estays below the top of the water. If the faucet is above the water level have someone put thier finger over the end of the hose in the pool while you move the end of the hose to a spot below the bottomof the pool.
An inclined plane is a simple machine that can be described as a flat surface that is slanted
Saving the water is easy enough if you have a large enough container, such as a bath tub. Making sure never to allow the end of the water-out hose is never lower than the top of the machine[or the machine will empty itself on the floor] attach a grey water hose to the out hose and the other end into your tub. When the machine pumps out the water will empty into the tub,or any where else you direct it.
I approached the problem of first attaching one end of a garden hose to an outside garden tap connection, and connecting another tap to the other end with a compattable thread for the washing machines hose to screw into. I never do a hot wash so only connected the cold water pipe. I went to Farmlands for the bits or even a garden center. I fed the pipe in via a window rather than drilling any holes. If you are closer to a toilet than a kitchen sink you can use the toilet bowl to discharge the water into.
I'm assuming Musical instrument. Take a old garden hose and put a funnel on the end, you get a trumpet. The longer the hose is the lower the instrument will be.
The CPAP mask is connected to the machine using special tubing also known as a hose. One end of the hose connects to an elbow or an adapter on the bottom of the mask. The other end of the hose connects to the CPAP machine output joint. It should fit snuggly, but not be difficult to attach. If it is, then you may not have the right size hosing or adapter for the mask/machine you are using and should contact your Respiratory Therapist, Physician, or CPAP supplier for help in trouble shooting this problem.
Tu madre
Yes, fleas and bedbugs are both parasites.
If you have ever tried to wind a garden hose back to its original position after watering several gardens, you know exactly how this phrase came to be. The hose gets tangled in every which way and absolutely refuses to lay in the perfect rings from wince it came. You end up with a tangle of semi-similiar revolutions of garden hose. Hence the phrase: all hosed up.