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Dear internets
English is not a subset of US English. It's the other way round. Kthxbai.
PS. US English speakers out there - I know that using the word "toilet" is deemed somehow impolite, but is it true that it's only ever used to refer to the plumbing fixture? (If you're not using terms like "commode" instead) That is, it's not used to refer to the "smallest room" at all?
PS. US English speakers out there - I know that using the word "toilet" is deemed somehow impolite, but is it true that it's only ever used to refer to the plumbing fixture? (If you're not using terms like "commode" instead) That is, it's not used to refer to the "smallest room" at all?
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I've never in my whole life called the whole room the toilet. It sounds -- bizarre -- to my American ears.
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Probably just as well I'm not intending to visit the US again until you get rid of your Chief Moron and hopefully the stupid fingerprinting regime for all
criminalstourists entering the country. :-)Re: Actual Conversation
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Unless it's an en-suite - which usually contains a toilet, a washbasin/vanity unit and a shower. But that's part of somebody's bedroom, so you wouldn't expect guests to use it.
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Even the fanciest houses here don't have a separate room for the porcelain throne all by itself. The only place I've ever run across that is in England, in very old-fashioned B&Bs, and I always assumed it was a function of separating out the facilities in a shared bathroom to make them more accessible to the folks who were using it.
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