foam at the mouth ağzı köpürmek

listen to the pronunciation of foam at the mouth ağzı köpürmek
Türkisch - Englisch
foam
sea foam; the sea

He is in Europe, across the foam.

A substance composed of a large collection of bubbles or their solidified remains

A foam mat can soften a hard seat.

{v} to froth, gater froth, be in a rage
{n} froth, great passion, fury, rage
Custom_Foam
The light-colored substance which is made up of an aggregation of bubbles, formed on the surface of liquids by violent agitation
Clumps of bubbles or suds on the surface of water Usually introduced by bathers
If a liquid foams, it is full of small bubbles and keeps moving slightly. I let the water run into it and we watched as it foamed and bubbled. ravines with foaming rivers rushing through them. = froth
To form foam, or become filled with foam; said of a steam boiler when the water is unduly agitated and frothy, as because of chemical action
Foam consists of a mass of small bubbles that are formed when air and a liquid are mixed together. The water curved round the rocks in great bursts of foam. = froth
Fire fighting material consisting of small bubbles of air, water, and concentrating agents Foam will put out a fire by blanketing it, excluding air and blocking the escape of volatile vapor
A dressing produced from polyurethane a soft, open cell sheets and may be single layer or multiple layers They are non-adherent, can absorb large amounts of exudate and can also be used as secondary dressings They are also available impregnated with charcoal and with a waterproof backing
To form or emit a foam; to bubble
can result in pools that have used quaternary ammonium compound (QUATS) algaecides This can be made worse, if there is an air leak in the return line In spas, body oils can react with the natural alkalinity of the water and form "soaps" Aeration will increase the foaming Anti-Foam products and enzyme products are useful in controlling the problem
  The aerated solution created by forcing air into or entraining air in water containing a foam concentrate by means of suitability designed equipment or by cascading it through the air at a high velocity   Foam reduces combustion by cooling, moistening and excluding oxygen
A lightweight, cellular plastic material containing gas-filled voids Typical foams include urethane, PVC and polyester
A dispersion of gas bubbles in a liquid, in which at least one dimension falls within the colloidal size range
The formation of bubbles in liquids often caused by continuous pumping of low surface-tension fluids and the entrapment of air Hydrophobic silicates dispersed in paraffin oils usually work well as anti-foams
A mass of bubbles on the surface of any liquid formed by injection of air
The white substance, consisting of an aggregation of bubbles, which is formed on the surface of liquids, or in the mouth of an animal, by violent agitation or fermentation; froth; spume; scum; as, the foam of the sea