The Hoover vacuum cleaner was named after W.H. Hoover. He was the owner of a leather goods manufacturing shop who bought the patent for a suction sweeper from a janitor Mr. Spangler. W.H. Hoover then retained Mr. Spangler as a partner in 1908.
it comes from the company hoover and people now callvacuum clearers hoovers
The USA, from the Hoover Company who still manufacture household goods
1927 American patented vacuum cleaner company name As a family name, it is attested to 1224 A.D in Germany.
You can use the word suck in a variety of sentences. For instance, "The Hoover vacuum will suck all of the dirt out of the carpeting" or "It must suck to find out you've got an overdue library book".
The likely word is "hovered" (floated, suspended).
The term hoover is the name of a brand, but as there is no committee to justify the use of words, as there is in France, anybody can use the word 'hoover' in verb context.
Yes, the word 'vacuum' is a noun, a verb, and an adjective.The noun 'vacuum' is a word for a space completely void of matter; a space where the air has been almost completely removed; a shortened form of the word vacuum cleaner; a word for a thing.
Mover. Louver Groover Improver Maneuver And the final word on rhyming with hoover... Thesaurus
vacuum - i
vacuum
The latin word vacuum is 'le vide' in French. A vacuum cleaner is 'un aspirateur'
The latin root vac means empty