From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishhosepipehose‧pipe /ˈhəʊzpaɪp $ ˈhoʊz-/ noun [countable] British EnglishDDLG a long hose
Examples from the Corpus
hosepipe• If you paid a hosepipe fee in the past this has now been dropped.• A hosepipe was attached to the exhaust pipe leading into the interior of the van and the engine was still running.• But all hosepipe users will now have to cough up £33 a year.• Two months ago six million people faced hosepipe bans - it could be the same story next year.• This mains-pressure hosepipe controller is designed to keep your garden watered while you are away from home.• MacLane still had his rubber hosepipe with him, like a comforter blanket.• MacLane slapped his open palm lightly with a leaded length of rubber hosepipe.• The pond, headers and add-on filters were filled using the hosepipe.