salle de bain
No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".No. Roman toilets required, as ours do, running water. This was not possible at roadside. If nature called, they "used the bushes".
Egyptian toilets are commonly referred to as "squat toilets" or "squatting toilets." These toilets consist of a hole in the ground, often surrounded by ceramic or porcelain, and require users to squat over them instead of sitting. They are widely used in many parts of Egypt and other countries, particularly in Asia and the Middle East. Some modern facilities may also have Western-style sitting toilets alongside squat toilets.
Because that happened to be the word used to describe them.
In the 1800s, common types of toilets included chamber pots, outhouses, and early versions of indoor flush toilets.
No. Toilets were not invented until the 1600s CE. Prior to that, people used latrines and outhouses. Secondly, the pyramids were intended as mausoleums and most mausoleums built today do not even have toilets because they are not designed to be inhabited by living people.
Toilets are known as latrines.
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.
Yes
There wasn't toilets on the ships.
toilettes garçons
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).
les toilettes (used in the plural)
les toilettes, les WC
commodes
a head
In Europe, typically public toilets are labeled as WCs, which stands for “water closet.”
Yes, they have. On highways it is an obligation to maintain the toilets clean, and provide the access for free even if you would not buy anything.