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English

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Noun

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hot water bag (plural hot water bags)

  1. (dated) A hot water bottle.
    • 1887, Oliver Wendell Holmes, chapter 1, in Our Hundred Days in Europe[1], Boston: Houghton Mifflin, page 20:
      Nothing is more comfortable, nothing, I should say, more indispensable, than a hot-water bag,—or rather, two hot-water bags; for they will burst sometimes, as I found out, and a passenger who has become intimate with one of these warm bosom friends feels its loss almost as if it were human.
    • 1931, Ethel Lina White, chapter 5, in Put Out the Light[2], London: Wark Lock:
      Presently her stiff limbs relaxed in the gentle heat from her hot water bags.
    • 1957, Neville Shute, On the Beach[3], New York: William Morrow:
      “I think he’s got flu, Mummy. He’s frightfully tired, for one thing. He’ll have to go to bed directly we get home. Could you light a fire in his room, and put a hot-water bag in the bed? []