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Why do Brits call the toilet the bog?
The Bog. So, with the origins of the word toilet established, let’s take a look at some alternative words to toilet. Boghouse comes from the British slang meaning to defecate, so when you go the bog, you really are being quite literal!
What is toilet paper in British?
TP, toilet roll, toilet tissue, bathroom tissue, bog paper, bog roll, lavvy paper, (British, mildly vulgar), loo roll (British, informal), loo paper (British, informal)
Where does the slang bog come from?
This has long been a British slang term for a lavatory or toilet. It’s a shortened form of the older bog-house for a latrine, privy, or place of ease, which is seventeenth century and is a variation on an even older term, boggard.
Is Dunny a rude word?
The word “Dunny” is Australian slang for toilet or outhouse. Technically “Dunny” isn’t a rude word but not many people on average say the word dunny.
What do English call paper towels?
In Britain, I don’t know about elsewhere, we mostly call the whole thing a “kitchen roll” (note spelling). It is a roll of paper, perforated to enable one or more sheets to be torn off at a time. These may be called ‘towels’ (countable), and the paper itself can be called ‘kitchen towel’ (a non-count or mass noun).
What do the British call paper towels?
In Britain, paper towels for kitchen use are also known as kitchen rolls, kitchen paper, or kitchen towels. For home use, paper towels are usually sold in a roll of perforated sheets, but some are sold in stacks of pre-cut and pre-folded layers for use in paper-towel dispensers.
What is bog standard slang?
It means to be basic, to be ordinary, to be unexceptional, to be uninspired – it just means ordinary. If you say something is ‘bog standard’, you mean it is perfectly ordinary. “He’s got a bog standard car” means a perfectly ordinary car.
What does bog mean as in toilet?
Bog. The bog is a colloquial expression in British English for a toilet. Originally “bog” was used to describe an open cesspit and the word was later applied to the privy connected to it. More wide-spread is the usage bogroll, meaning toilet paper.
Why do Brits say innit?
“Innit” is an abbreviation of “isn’t it” most commonly used amongst teenagers and young people. This phrase is used to confirm or agree with something that another person has just said. “It’s really cold today.”
Why is it called a Bogroll?
The term ” bog ” is a British slang for the bathroom, the john, the head, the toilet. And of course, the only “roll” you are likely to find in the “bog” is made of tissue paper. Hence, “bogroll”. “Do the animals here in the zoo have a bathroom?”
Is giant’s “bog roll” from the UK?
Pat reports that the product itself wasn’t labeled “bog roll,” just this sale-price card. Giant is a chain that is based and exclusively operates in the northeast U.S., so there’s no British ownership or anything like that. So how did “bog roll” get there? I’m betting a British employee in the home office, but honestly, I have no idea.
What is the origin of the term ‘swamp roll’?
A bit like a “forward roll” but especially adapted for swampy areas, it was invented by Mr. Deevun Parp from the village of Cackpile in Swampshire. Since the technique afforded the traveller a clean arse at the end of his journey, the term has more recently been adopted to refer to toilet-tissue