i would recomend a shower
a bath you would just sit there in your own dirt
:) hope this helps
Taking a shower typically uses less water than taking a bath, so it can be more water-efficient. Showers are also generally quicker and can help save time in your daily routine. However, the choice between a shower and a bath ultimately depends on personal preference and needs.
A safety shower would be installed in a work place where large amounts of corrosive acids or bases are used. If a chemical spill occurs involving parts of the body, the worker can go under the safety shower and wash off the chemicals before severe skin burns occur.
Shower, because you don't need the water below the surface and it is already dirty. It's like sitting in your own used dirty water so you'll be dirty anyways so why use water. If your taking a shower your using clean water and you can turn off the water when you don't need it.
It depends on the shower heads, bath heads, and the person. If you take a long shower, and use little water for a bath, bath is better. If you use a lot of water for a bath and take short showers with water saving heads, a shower would be better.
We can't provide graphs on WikiAnswers. However, here is an answer to a similar question: It depends on your shower head and whether it has a flow restrictor in it and how long you shower. If your home was built before 1992, chances are your showerheads put out about five gallons of water per minute (gpm). Multiply this by the number of minutes you're in the shower, and the water adds up fast! An average bath requires 30-50 gallons of water. The average shower of four minutes with an old shower head uses 20 gallons of water. With a low-flow shower head, only 10 gallons of water is used. To test the amount of water used in a shower vs. a bath is to put the plug in the bath next time you take a shower (but not a stand-alone shower as you might spill over the lower shower wall). After you've showered, see how much the tub filled up. If there is less water than you would usually have in a bath, then you will probably save money by taking a shower instead of a bath.
well i hate to say it but dont take a bath but i would recommend a shower because in a bath you sit there in your own dirt floating around in water it makes you feel cleaner and good around your boyfriend! Hope This Helps!
A shower! So you don't soak in dirty bath water!
Take a shower or a bath
In Japan, it is common to take a relaxing bath in a traditional deep soaking tub called a "Ofuro" before rinsing off with a quick shower. The bath is seen as a way to cleanse and relax, while the shower is for rinsing off and refreshing.
every day or night
The bath came first, then the shower.
Taking a shower typically uses less water than taking a bath, so it can be more water-efficient. Showers are also generally quicker and can help save time in your daily routine. However, the choice between a shower and a bath ultimately depends on personal preference and needs.
Bath tubs don't necessarily contain a shower, and a shower may not have a bath tub. Shower tubs are a combination bathtub and shower; the shower head is usually mounted above the bath tub, allowing for bathing and shower drainage.
ONE
They need to be cleaned first before going to the tub.
Shower. In a bath you have all the dirt floating around you, whereas it goes down the drain in the shower.
There is no need to shower after an Epsom salt bath unless you want to rinse off any residue. It is recommended to pat yourself dry after the bath to allow the mineral absorption to continue.