Tito
The prefix for "hydrant" is "hydro-," which means relating to water.
The energy behind a fire hydrant that is not flowing water is known as "static pressure". This is the water pressure that is normally available from the water main when the hydrant is closed.
hydrant is the sub part of fire water network from which water shall be discharged to on fire parts, and from where the hydrants gets water is the monitor, i.e from monitor water shall be distributed to hydrants.
There is no reason to dump the water from a fire hydrant. The only reason a fire hydrant should ever be opened is if there is a fire or people are dieing from lack of water on a severly hot day.
No
hydrant
The bow is the FRONT of the boat, sometimes used to indicate the front or leading edge that pushes through the water.
The opposite of hydrant (water-releasing structure) could be: -- drain (where water goes, i.e. back out) -- inlet (where water enters the system, as opposed to where it exits)
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A hydrant is any discharge pipe with a valve and spout at which water may be drawn from a water main. Obviously we nearly always see these in conjunction with supplying water to fight fires, but calling it a fire hydrant makes that specific. It also probably gets tacked on to emphasize the purpose of the hydrant.
A hydrant is an attachment valve from a water main used by the fire department. One of the key features commonly found is an poppet shutoff that usually works to shut off the water if a car hits the hydrant.
The word "hydrant" comes from hydro, a Greek word for water. It comes from the Hydra, a many-headed water beast.