It's from the days when people had to draw water. As if up from a well. It's not that far off from the term "draught beer" for that matter -- except there the beer is drawn up from below with a pump.
Apparently the rest of the world has always had indoor plumbing.
I don't think it's a particular idiom..."to draw" means to pull in a certain direction, or to cause to move by pulling, so really it's a standard definition.
It's from the days when people had to draw water. As if up from a well. It's not that far off from the term "draught beer" for that matter -- except there the beer is drawn up from below with a pump.
Apparently the rest of the world has always had indoor plumbing.
True. But baths are so rare anyway, just filling the tub is lumped together with the bathing act itself. It's like the inverse of the eskimos and their 17 words for snow.
True. But baths are so rare anyway, just filling the tub is lumped together with the bathing act itself. It's like the inverse of the eskimos and their 17 words for snow.