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  • Room in which toilet is
    by debac at 14:11 on 23 May 2011
    Normally I'd call the room in which the loo is "the loo". However, I have an action scene set in a loo room, and it's necessary to talk about the room and the loo separately. I've used "the small room" (not "the smallest room") to allude to the room.

    Any ideas, that sound natural?

    TIA,

    Deb
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by Jem at 14:18 on 23 May 2011
    I'd say the bathroom, personally.
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by debac at 14:25 on 23 May 2011
    Thanks Jem. But there's no bath in it...? What do you call it if no bath in it?
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by Jem at 14:37 on 23 May 2011
    Oh, I see. The Americans say "rest room", don't they? "The smallest room" is a euphemism and sounds a bit twee, which is okay if someone calls it that in character but sounds odd, otherwise. You could differentiate between loo, the room and lavatory, the actual piece of equipment.
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by EmmaD at 15:36 on 23 May 2011
    Is it in a particular place in the house? As in "It's not the bathroom, it's the downstairs loo" or something. Would feel more like the room than the china.

    Emma
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by debac at 16:24 on 23 May 2011
    Jem, I didn't use "the smallest room" cos it would sound twee, and isn't right for my first person vp. I used small room cos it involves her being in there and things like:

    "She pressed herself against the back wall of the small room."

    She is inside the room for some time, and some action takes place in there (violence actually), so I just wanted a way to describe the room easily.

    Loo, toilet and lavatory all mean the same, really - both the porcelain and the room in which it dwells.

    Emma, thanks - downstairs loo would work well if it was being said by people who lived there. She doesn't live there and it's an alien environment for her (she is in someone else's house and is attacked).

    I really appreciate all the suggestions. Not sure there is a good alternative, so I'll just have to soldier on with what I've got. But nice to know I'm not missing something obvious...

    Deb
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by susieangela at 16:48 on 23 May 2011
    I think 'small room' doesn't give the impression of a toilet immediately.
    How about you actually mention the toilet in passing, so the reader knows, eg:

    She pressed herself against the back wall, sandwiched between the window and the toilet.

    OR:

    She pressed herself against the back wall. The loo-roll holder dug into her thigh.

    Or something.
    Susiex
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by susieangela at 16:51 on 23 May 2011
    Or, what about 'cloakroom'? If it's in a private house, I think that would be understood as a loo with washbasin?

    Susiex
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by NMott at 17:24 on 23 May 2011
    Cloakroom if it's downstairs.
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by debac at 17:36 on 23 May 2011
    Oooh, cloakroom is good, thanks both.

    Susie, it's already known that she's in there. The difficulty in finding another way of putting it was to avoid saying over and over that she's in the room with the loo.

    Thanks you all - much appreciated!

    <Added>

    We already know it's a loo room, cos she's just used the loo. There just isn't an adequate word for it when one can't use the label "loo" (or toilet or lavatory) for fear of confusion with the actual porcelain thing.
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by Freebird at 14:55 on 24 May 2011
    Where is your story set? How do people refer to it there? If it was set in our northern town, for example, it would just be called 'the toilet'.

    But if she's in a posher situation, she would use something different, appropriate to the character or to the setting in which she finds herself.
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by eedel9kvr at 15:13 on 24 May 2011
    Could it be an ensuite?

    Edel
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by Account Closed at 15:19 on 24 May 2011
    The bog?

    <Added>

    After all, you did ask for ideas that sound natural.
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by GaiusCoffey at 09:43 on 25 May 2011
    Cloakroom!?
    Yegads, NO.
    A cloakroom is where you hang your coat not where you point your percy.
  • Re: Room in which toilet is
    by alexhazel at 17:59 on 27 May 2011
    I'm with Gaius. Cloakroom conjures up images of an attendant dourly watching the proceedings and wondering who's job it's going to be to clean up the mess. Likewise, 'closet' would have me wondering how they're managing to dodge all the brooms.

    You could use the term that the French use: WC. That is, after all, the place where the toilet is, rather than the toilet itself. Restroom is another term that refers to the room rather than the plumbing, but it does sound very American (I once heard a woman at Birmingham Airport, on being asked for the restroom, remark, "That's a posh word for it!"). Bathroom also sounds American, unless there is a bath there as well. I'm struggling to think of any alternative to these, other than 'toilet', 'loo' or 'lavatory'. If you say 'in' plus one of those terms, it would generally be understood to mean the room, unless they were doing that scene from the last Harry Potter film.

    Alex
  • This 18 message thread spans 2 pages: 1  2  > >