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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 bathroom or Saint John's in the same situation
  • word usage - Which to use, washroom or restroom? - English Language . . .
    In the U S -- at least the places I've lived -- "bathroom" and "restroom" are the conventional terms Yes, they're euphemisms, we say "bathroom" even if there is no bath tub and "restroom" even though there is rarely a convenient place to rest "Washroom" would be understood but I think is rather out of date "Powder room" is definitely out of
  • Bathroom or Restroom - English Language Learners Stack Exchange
    Use the toilet falls below use the restroom, and use the washroom is in a distant last place: Incidentally, if I switch the corpus to UK English, bathroom remains the most common, washroom remains the least common, and toilet and restroom exchange places—although toilet creeps a bit closer to bathroom:
  • British term for washroom? [duplicate] - English Language Usage . . .
    “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 English
  • 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
  • Origin of going number 1 or number 2 in the bathroom
    This site mentions an old school room signal that children would use to ask to go to the restroom (holding up 1 or 2 fingers) But then a post further down claims that is just an urban legend and explains why it is unlikely to be the origin
  • grammar - where is there a vs where is the - English Language . . .
    Where is the restroom assumes the existence of restroom for the relevant place and asks about its location Where is there a parking lot does not assume the existence of a parking lot for the relevant place, but asks about where other parking lots are The implication is "where is the nearest parking lot?"
  • What is the anteroom in a public toilet called?
    When I have seen a women's lounge, it is usually a larger room outside a toilet restroom with vanities and some seating for fixing makeup, waiting for the restroom to be available, etc From the hallway you go into the lounge, then from the lounge into the restroom
  • Toilet, lavatory or loo for polite society
    We don't tend to use "restroom" in the UK, but, again, most people will understand you Other euphemisms for toilet in the UK, that are used in polite society, include Male toilets Gents (as in gentlemen's) Mens; Little boys' room; Female toilets Ladies; Little girls' room; Toilets WC (water closet) and somethings I've only heard from my
  • 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





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