bath chair
Noun: A bath chair is a specific type of wheelchair, typically pushed by an attendant, historically associated with use at spas or seaside resorts for convalescent or infirm individuals.
The term is used to refer to the wheeled chair itself. It describes a piece of equipment for mobility, emphasizing its traditional context and method of propulsion. * The Victorian-era illustration showed an invalid being taken to the seaside in a bath chair. * At the old spa, you can still see a replica of a bath chair used by visitors in the 19th century.
- The term is largely historical and evokes a specific period (e.g., 18th-19th centuries) and setting (health resorts). In modern contexts, the general term "wheelchair" is used.
- It can be used metaphorically to suggest outdated methods of care or a bygone era of medical treatment.
- His ideas about patient transport are practically from the bath chair era.
- Wheelchair (n): The modern, general term for a chair with wheels used by people who cannot walk.
- Invalid carriage (n, historical): A similar historical term for a wheeled conveyance for a sick or disabled person.
- Wheelchair (in the specific, historical context)
- Invalid chair (historical)
- There is no direct antonym, as it is a specific object. Concepts like "ambulation" or "walking unaided" contrast with the state of requiring such a chair.
The core meaning is strictly that of a noun denoting the object. It does not function as a verb. Its definition is very specific and does not have multiple common meanings. The "bath" in the name refers to the town of Bath, England, famous for its spa waters, or more generally to spa towns ("taking the waters"), not to the act of bathing.
- a wheelchair usually pushed by an attendant, as at a spa