A jet of fine medicated vapor, used either as an application to a diseased part or to charge the air of a room with a disinfectant or a deodorizer.
To throw spray upon; to treat with a liquid in the form of spray; as, to spray a wound, or a surgical instrument, with carbolic acid.
An ensemble of water droplets torn by the wind from an extensive body of water, generally from the crests of waves, and carried up into the air in such quantities that it reduces the horizontal visibility.
when water or other liquid or material is made to shoot out in very small droplets or in a fine mist Drilling through metal can cause a dangerous spray of sparks. The gardener used to spray the plants with insecticide every month.
a dispenser that turns a liquid (such as perfume) into a fine spray
be discharged in sprays of liquid; "Water sprayed all over the floor"
scatter in a mass or jet of droplets; "spray water on someone"; "spray paint on the wall"
cover by spraying with a liquid; "spray the wall with paint"
Spray: A moving mass of thermal sprayed dispersed liquid droplets or heat softened particles
An aerosol of relatively large liquid droplets produced by the mechanical disruption of bulk liquid material, with sizes upwards of a few micrometers.3
Fine particles of electrolyte carried up from the surface by gas bubbles. (See Gassing.)
Water applied through an orifice in finely divided particles to absorb heat and smother fire, to protect exposures from radiated heat, and to carry water toward otherwise inaccessible fire.
A liquid, mechanically produced particle with sizes varying from submicroscopic to visible.
Method of application in which the paint is broken up into a fine mist and directed to the surface under pressure. Specific types of spray equipment are: aerosol, airless, and air assisted.
A system of applying water through specially designed nozzles in the form of finely divided particles.