It is the process of washing oneself, dressing, and or attending to one's appearance.
An example might be like: Emily got up to begin her morning toilette.
But it's also know for perfume.
its french. "l'eau de toilette" means a non-high end perfume, a toiletry item. does not mean toilet water
The word "toilette" is pronounced as "twa-LET". However, the pronunciation may vary slightly in different regions or accents.
Basically it means toilet water. Not literally though. Its just the french word for "diluted perfume". Most body sprays and splashes are eau de toilette. Eau du perfum is a much stronger concentration then eau du toilette.
Yes it means toilet in english
un rouleau de papier toilette
"La toilette" (fem.) is an old fashioned word for washing up yourself and get pretty. It is still used in that sense in "faire sa toilette". Ladies used to do that in front of ornate tables, which were called in the same way by extension (a sense of the word that you will find only in 19th-century literature). In that process of getting neat, clean, many uses some "eau de toilette", a kind of perfume. It was named this because you used it while doing your "toilette". The word is still in use to speak of a kind of perfume that is less strong and concentrated. As getting neat and attractive was often before going out, you had to get well dressed, hence the word spread to clothing. That sense of the word is now nearly out of use, but suggested pretty dresses and other delicate feminine clothing, with the purpose of being well-dressed, so we're not speaking of underwear here. Finally, "les toilettes" (feminine and plural) are the WC. It is less prestigious but still related to cleaning, in the same manner that the English-speaking world often use "bathroom" for the loo, even though you don't take any baths in there. "Où sont les toilettes ?" (where is the bathroom/loo) is still a very useful sentence to know in modern French.
The word bottle can be a noun or verb.The noun is a container, often glass or plastic, used to contain liquids but also for gases or granular solids. The verb means to place or pack in a bottle, or metaphorically to enclose or to repress (bottle up).When used as a modifier (e.g. bottle opener), bottle is a noun adjunct, not an adjective.
The police used pepper spray to quell the riot.
Yes, the word 'bottle' is a noun, a word for a container made of glass or plastic, a word for a thing.The word 'bottle' is also a verb: bottle, bottles, bottling, bottled.
Yes, the word 'spray' is both a verb and a noun. The noun 'spray' is a word for liquid that is moving through the air in the form of tiny drops; a liquid in a container that can be forced out in tiny drops; the container of such a liquid; an act or instance of using such a container; a word for a group of flower on a branch used for decoration; an attractive arrangement of flowers; a word for a thing.
bottle
The word "bottle" has two syllables.
spray for your hair