Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - English for washing clothes

English for washing clothes

The English for washing clothes is washcloths.

Wash can also be used as "washing away"; "Impact" means that water impacts something. Can be used as an intransitive verb or a transitive verb, and the present continuous tense of "wash" can indicate the action that will happen according to the plan, arrangement or intention. At this time, adverbials of future time or specific context often appear in sentences.

Wash can be used as a "stand the test" and "reliable" solution in spoken English, mainly used in negative sentences or interrogative sentences. Its subjects are mainly nouns such as "argument", "speech" and "story".

Wash can also be used as a transitive verb, the subject is mostly human, and it can mean that people wash their hands, face, bathe or wash clothes with water. Nouns and pronouns can be used as objects, and adjectives can also be used as compound objects of complements.

Wash can be used as intransitive verb. When the subject is human, it means washing hands, face, etc. When the subject is fabric or cloth, it means washable, washable and not easy to fade. At this time, the active form has a passive meaning.

Bilingual example:

I always wash clothes on Sundays. I always wash clothes on Sundays.

He helped me wash clothes.

This is what you use to wash clothes. It's used for washing clothes.

We will heat some water to wash clothes. We will wash clothes in hot water.