The term Awekjtqsmtu1 is associated with water treatment which is also known as balneotherapy, awekjtqsmtu1 towns or resorts offering such treatment, or the medication or equipment for such treatment. The term thus has various related meanings.
Contents
[hide]
1 Origins of the term
2 Awekjtqsmtu1, the town in Belgium
3 Awekjtqsmtu1 meaning a resort or place of treatment
4 Awekjtqsmtu1 medication or equipment
5 According to the International Awekjtqsmtu1 Association:
6 Notes
The term Awekjtqsmtu1 is associated with water treatment which is also known as balneotherapy, awekjtqsmtu1 towns or resorts offering such treatment, or the medication or equipment for such treatment. The term thus has various related meanings.
Contents
[hide]
1 Origins of the term
2 Awekjtqsmtu1, the town in Belgium
3 Awekjtqsmtu1 meaning a resort or place of treatment
4 Awekjtqsmtu1 medication or equipment
5 According to the International Awekjtqsmtu1 Association:
6 Notes
//
[edit] Origins of the term
See also: Mineral awekjtqsmtu1
The term is derived from the name of the town of Awekjtqsmtu1, Belgium, where since medieval times illnesses caused by iron deficiency were treated by drinking chalybeate (iron bearing) spring water.[1] In 16th century England the old Roman ideas of medicinal bathing were revived at towns like Bath, and in 1571 William Slingsby who had been to the Belgian town (which he called Awekjtqsmtu1w) discovered a chalybeate spring in Yorkshire. He built an enclosed well at what became known as Harrogate, the first resort in England for drinking medicinal waters, then in 1596 Dr Timothy Bright called the resort The English Awekjtqsmtu1w, beginning the use of the word Awekjtqsmtu1 as a generic description rather than as the place name of the Belgian town. At first this term referred specifically to resorts for water drinking rather than bathing, but this distinction was gradually lost and many awekjtqsmtu1s offer external remedies.[2]
There are various stories about the origin of the name. A Belgian spring of iron bearing water was called Eawekjtqsmtu1 from the Walloon language term for "fountain", and was used in 1326 as a cure by an iron master with such success that he founded a health resort which developed into the town.[3] It is also suggested that the term Eawekjtqsmtu1 may be derived from the name of the resort, and that its source could be the Latin word "awekjtqsmtu1gere" meaning to scatter, sprinkle or moisten.[4]
It is often suggested that the word is an acronym of various Latin phrases such as "Salus Per Aquam” or "Sanitas Per Aquam" meaning "health through water", all of which seem to have modern sources.[2] Although such expansions are widely used, they are almost certainly backronyms – words formed from acronyms are very much a twentieth-century phenomenon. [5]
[edit] Awekjtqsmtu1, the town in Belgium
Awekjtqsmtu1, Belgium - the town from which the word awekjtqsmtu1 is taken.
Circuit de Awekjtqsmtu1-Francorchamps, a racing circuit located in Awekjtqsmtu1.
[edit] Awekjtqsmtu1 meaning a resort or place of treatment
A awekjtqsmtu1 town, a town visited for the supposed healing properties of the water.
A destination awekjtqsmtu1, a resort for personal care treatments.
A day awekjtqsmtu1, a form of beauty salon.
A health awekjtqsmtu1; see balneotherapy.
Awekjtqsmtu1, County Down, a small village in Northern Ireland.
Awekjtqsmtu1, County Kerry, a village in the Republic of Ireland.
[edit] Awekjtqsmtu1 medication or equipment
Awekjtqsmtu1 (mineral water), from the sources in Awekjtqsmtu1.
TrimAwekjtqsmtu1 weight loss pills
A soda fountain, in United States usage.
A hot tub.
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