W.C. stands for water closet although why water closet is the same as toilet I don't know
used to be called that and stood for Water Closet
because when you need a hefty old poo, you can go to the "toilet" its called the "toilet" to be informal and so you dont say.."the dunny" like the australians and you dont say "bog" like a typical freak :P
Comes from French for a cleaning cloth. Why it was used to describe the modern toilet is anyone's guess. Somebody decided to use it in that way and the name stuck. Why is anything called what it is? Somebody decided that was a good name and nobody changed it.
there are 8000 toilets at the o2 arena
Yes
salle de bain
"WC" refers to the old name for a toilet (in English) "Water Closet" which is an international means of indicating a toilet.
les toilettes, les WC
"WC" is what Germans call their toilets.
Edwardian toilets were commonly referred to as "water closets" or "WC." These fixtures typically featured a pull-chain mechanism for flushing and were often made of porcelain. The design emphasized both functionality and aesthetics, with many models incorporating decorative elements that reflected the architectural styles of the time. The term "lavatory" was also used, particularly in more formal contexts.
Toilets are known as latrines.
There wasn't toilets on the ships.
Roman toilets were not called baths, they were called foricae. Baths were called thermae and they were social centers in addition to being places to bathe. All the thermae (baths) had foricae (toilets).
used to be called that and stood for Water Closet
Toilets are called toilets in Australia. A toilet is also colloquially known as dunny or loo.
commodes
a head