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  • Washroom, restroom, bathroom, lavatory, toilet or toilet room
    I've always been confused by the terms washroom, restroom, bathroom, lavatory, toilet and toilet room My impression is that Canadians would rather say washroom while Americans would probably say
  • word usage - Which to use, washroom or restroom? - English Language . . .
    If the room only has sinks for washing, it's a washroom If it has toilets, it's a restroom If the room is in your home, it's a bathroom Here's an odd idiom of the US If someone asks, "May I use your bathroom," the person is asking to use the room to eliminate, not to bathe So, a room in the home with a toilet sink is called a bathroom, even if it lacks a tub or shower
  • Bathroom or Restroom - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    I have a specific question: Are Americans more inclined to use quot;bathroom quot; or quot;restroom quot; about a bathroom restroom with several sinks and stalls in a company building?
  • Where does restroom come from? [closed] - English Language Usage . . .
    Restroom: Of course no one wants to rest in the room containing the toilet; restroom is an obvious euphemism Interestingly, English (like some other languages) can express the "toilet-room" concept only via indirect terms like this Restroom: Originally meaning a public toilet, this seems to be of American origin, with the earliest usages found around 1900 It’s an extremely common usage
  • British term for washroom? [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
    Closed 12 years ago Possible Duplicate: “Washroom”, “restroom”, “bathroom”, “lavatory”, “toilet” or “toilet room” What is the British equivalent of the American 'washroom'? (Besides 'loo', of course, as it is informal ) I've found two definitions, with both saying that they are of American English as opposed to British
  • meaning - Is it correct to call a room with a bath a toilet . . .
    "Restroom" is also common, especially for the room with toilets in a public place, like a store or restaurant Yes, someone might say, "I have to go to the toilet", but this means they need to eliminate waste, they're referring to the fixture, and not particularly to the room
  • Origin of going number 1 or number 2 in the bathroom
    I was wondering about the origin of using the terms "number one" and "number two" for going to the bathroom (for those unaware, number one is urinating, number two is defecating, at least in the US
  • Is there a formal way to say we want to go to the toilet?
    @J R There's an awful lot in the question for English language enthusiasts The way "U non-U" distinctions meant that upper class people preferred "toilet" (if referring to it at all was necessary) while middle-class people preferred "lavatory" or being euphemistic, along with different views as to what counted as "formal", and then how those distinctions changed over time, as just one aspect
  • word usage - What is the place with toilets, sinks, bathrooms in a . . .
    Do we call that big room "a restroom" or "a bathroom", for example, "there's a bathroom in the swimming pool" or "There's a restroom in the swimming pool"? Inaccurate: The big room is called a changing room Swimming pools don't have what is understood to be a bathroom
  • What is the anteroom in a public toilet called?
    The relative prevalence of basin referring to the restroom ones is merely a result of kitchen sinks having a longer history of being fixed with drains; in restrooms, they remained unconnected much longer





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