Cludgie. Another rather vulgar term for toilet is 'cludgie'. It refers to an outside toilet and is predominantly used in Scotland.
Cludgie – Toilet
In the Scottish language, there are a number of words for toilet, such as bog and shunky, but cludgie is our favorite. This word is mainly used in and around Glasgow.
If you ask a Scot to point you in the direction of the cludgie, he or she will most likely know exactly where you want to go, but may wince at your use of slang. For the uninitiated, cludgie is a Scottish word meaning “toilet”, although probably not to be used in the politest of companies.
Khazi. A somewhat outdated phrase, khazi derives from the Cockney word “carsey”, meaning toilet.
Carsey/ Khazi
(Noun) Originating from the Cockney region its usage is much more common with people in Liverpool. It comes from the Italian term casa meaning “house.” This slang refers to the lavatory or toilet itself.
commode. crapper (coarse slang) crapper trapper (coarse slang, rare) devil's back roads (slang, rare) dunny (AU&NZ, slang)
'The loo' is generally a safe term to use and likely won't offendanyone. 'Lavatory' is a good option for people looking for a very formal word to use in very formal occasions. In the United Kingdom, some people will shorten lavatory to just 'lav' and when they do it becomes quite informal.
This room is commonly known as a "bathroom" in American English, a lavatory or loo in the United Kingdom, a "washroom" in Canadian English, and by many other names across the English-speaking world.
The term "raspberry" derives from the Cockney rhyming slang "raspberry tart" for "fart" (that is, "blowing a fart").
Bog roll. Taken from the 16th-century Scottish/Irish word meaning 'soft and moist,' bog means restroom or lavatory. Bog roll, naturally, is an idiom for toilet paper.
Nappy in relation to ale or beer is first recorded in the Dictionary of the Scots Language at the beginning of the eighteenth century, where it is used as an adjective meaning 'foaming, brisk, strong, rich, heady'.
This usage stuck in the United States and Canada following the British colonization of North America, but in the United Kingdom, the word "nappy" took its place. Most sources believe nappy is a diminutive form of the word napkin, which itself was originally a diminutive.
A geggy means a mouth. So if you've been told to shut yer geggy, it means you should probably shut up. Related topics:GlasgowPost Office.
The Navy Department Library
The use of the term "head" to refer to a ship's toilet dates to at least as early as 1708, when Woodes Rogers (English privateer and Governor of the Bahamas) used the word in his book, A Cruising Voyage Around the World.
crapper (vulgar, slang) water closet. khazi (slang) pissoir (French)
Colloquially, flatulence may be referred to as "farting", "pumping", "trumping", "blowing off", "pooting", "passing gas", "breaking wind", "backfiring", or simply (in American English) "gas" or (British English) "wind". Derived terms include vaginal flatulence, otherwise known as a queef.
Richard the Third is Cockney slang for Turd.
Richard the Third can also mean other things!
Bo peep is Cockney rhyming Slang for sleep.
15 – Toilet Related French Vocabulary
Les WC – pronounce “double vé cé” or “vécé” in short – from the British Water Closet… Le petit coin, le trône – other words for the toilet, common slang.
khazi (plural khazis) (slang, chiefly UK) An outhouse or lavatory: a place used for urination and defecation. (slang, chiefly UK) A toilet: a fixture used for urination and defecation (also figuratively).
American cucumbers, whose seed is called Americana Slicing Hybrid, are the variety you're most likely familiar with at the grocery store, and are often simply labeled "cucumber." The skin of these cucumbers can be tougher than other varieties, and some you buy at the grocery store may have been coated in wax to help ...
Lavatory - Toilet. May I have - Can I get. Napkin - Serviette. Pudding - Sweet/Dessert/Afters.
To discharge one's solid bodily waste. relieve oneself. defecate. excrete.
Because it had water, it became known as the water closet. Somehow the name stuck, and plumbers continue to refer to a toilet as a water closet. That's what the “WC” imprinted on most toilets stands for.