flapper$28653$ - translation to greek
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flapper$28653$ - translation to greek

WESTERN WOMEN ATTIRED IN A PARTICULAR WAY IN THE 1920S
Flappers; Style of the flapper girl; Flapper girl; Flapppers; Flapper dress; Flapper era; Petting party
  • ''The Flapper Magazine'' inner page
  • French actress [[Polaire]] in 1899
  • Actress [[Norma Talmadge]]
  • Woman depicted in typical flapper outfit in the cover art for ''[[The Plastic Age]]'', 1924
  • A flapper s featured on the poster for the 1924 film ''[[The Enemy Sex]]''
  • An advertisement for the 1920 [[silent film]] comedy ''[[The Flapper]]'', with [[Olive Thomas]], before the look of the flapper had started to come together.
  • ''Life Magazine'' cover "The Flapper" by [[Frank Xavier Leyendecker]], 2 February 1922
  • [[Violet Romer]] in a flapper dress c. 1915
  • "Where there's smoke there's fire" by [[Russell Patterson]], showing a fashionably dressed flapper in the 1920s.

flapper      
n. νεοσσός, πουλάκι, μυγοσκοτώστρα, επιπόλαιο κορίτσι, επιπόλαιο κοράσιο
water closet         
  • [[Thomas William Twyford]] was one of the leading marketers of flush toilets in their first boom of popularity after the [[Great Exhibition]] of 1851.
  • 219x219px
  • The bowl drain is visible at the rear of the bowl, connected to the waste pipe.
  • [[Joseph Bramah]]'s improved version was the first practical flush toilet.
  • 220x220px
  • S-trap]], which laid the foundations for the modern flush toilet.
  • alt=Washout WC
  • A simplified cross-section through a siphonic toilet. The arrows show the flow of the flush water through the rim and jet into the bowl and out through the elongated S-shaped siphon.
  • A double-trap siphonic WC. Water enters at (A) pulling air into the aspirator (B) from the siphon leg (E) before passing into the rim (C) and into the pan (D). Water from the first trap in the bowl (F) is pushed through the siphon and out through the second trap (G) to the drain.
  • A flush toilet bowl during flushing action
  • Four common types of WC pan: washdown (figure 1); washout (figure 2); double-trap siphonic (figure 3); single-trap siphonic with jet (figure 4).
  • An elevated cistern produces a high-pressure flush using [[hydrostatic pressure]].
  • Roman]] public latrine found in the excavations of [[Ostia Antica]]
  • Reconstruction drawing showing the communal latrines in use, [[Housesteads Roman Fort]] (Vercovicium)
  • A simplified diagram of a siphonic WC cistern. The siphon is formed of a vertical pipe (1) that links the flush pipe (2) to a domed chamber (3). A perforated disc (4) covered by a flexible plate or flap (5) is joined by the siphon rod (6) to the flush lever (7).
  • Sloan pressure vessel
  • Flush toilets were widely available from the mid to late 19th century. Although [[Thomas Crapper]] did not invent the flush toilet, he was a leading manufacturer.
  • Typical sound of a flush toilet
  • Vacuum toilet in a train in Switzerland
  • [[George Jennings]] trademark on his manufactures
  • Spraying glaze onto a closet
TOILET THAT DISPOSES OF HUMAN EXCRETA BY USING WATER TO FLUSH IT
Water closet; Water toilet; Flushing toilet; Low Suite; Low suite; Toilet flushing; Water Closet; Watercloset; Valve closet; W/C; Water closets; Flushing Toilet; Western toilet; Shit shelf; Water-closet; 🚾; Washout toilet; German toilet; Flapper valve; Flush tank; 🅏; 🆏; Western commode; Seawater flushing; Raw water flushing; Siphon jet; Courtesy flush; Mercy flush; Flush Toilet; Flush toilets; Lavatory pan
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Definition

flapper
¦ noun informal (in the 1920s) a young woman who wore fashionable clothing and flouted conventional standards of behaviour.

Wikipedia

Flapper

Flappers were a subculture of young Western women in the 1920s who wore short skirts (knee height was considered short during that period), bobbed their hair, listened to jazz, and flaunted their disdain for what was then considered acceptable behavior. Flappers were seen as brash for wearing excessive makeup, drinking alcohol, smoking cigarettes in public, driving automobiles, treating sex in a casual manner, and otherwise flouting social and sexual norms. As automobiles became available, flappers gained freedom of movement and privacy.

Flappers are icons of the Roaring Twenties, the social, political turbulence, and increased transatlantic cultural exchange that followed the end of World War I, as well as the export of American jazz culture to Europe. There was a reaction to this counterculture from more conservative people, who belonged mostly to older generations. They claimed that the flappers' dresses were 'near nakedness', and that flappers were 'flippant', 'reckless', and unintelligent.

While primarily associated with the United States, the "modern girl" archetype was a worldwide phenomenon that had other names depending on the country, such as joven moderna in Argentina or garçonne in France, although the American term "flapper" was the most widespread internationally.