loo
nounEtymology
Uncertain, although usually derived in some way from Waterloo, the site of Wellington's 1815 victory over Napoleon, likely via a pun based on water closet. Other suggested derivations include corruptions of French l'eau (“water”), lieu (“place”), lieux d'aisances (“'places of convenience': a lavatory”), lieu à l'anglaise (“'English place': a British-style lavatory”), bordalou (“a diminutive chamber pot”) or gardez l'eau (“'mind the water'”), via Scots gardyloo, formerly used in Edinburgh while emptying chamber pots out of windows; the supposed use of "Room 100" as the lavatory in Continental hotels; a popularisation of lew, a regional corruption of lee (“downwind”), in reference to shepherds' privies or the former use of beakheads on that side of the ship for urination and defecation; or a clipped form of the name of the unpopular 19th-century Countess of Lichfield Lady Harriett Georgiana Louisa Hamilton Anson, who was the subject of an 1867 prank whereby her bedroom's name-card was placed on the door to the lavatory, prompting the other guests to begin speaking of "going to Lady Louisa".
Definitions
A lavatory
A lavatory: a room used for urination and defecation.
- Ensure that the tents are well-sited and clean, rubbish bins empty, and that the loos have toilet paper.
A toilet
A toilet: a fixture used for urination and defecation.
- The lack of running water in rural areas often makes Western-style loos hygienic disasters. Suddenly the noncontact squat toilet doesn′t look like such a bad option any more (as long as you roll up your trouser legs).
- Waterless urinals are a great way of keeping the guys out of the cubicle toilets, keeping the urine separated from the solid waste (when using composting loos) and reducing water consumption if you have flush loos.
A cry to urge on hunting dogs.
- Edg. Pilicock sate on pelicocks hill, a lo lo lo.
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To urge on with cries of loo or (figuratively) by other shouting or outcry.
- And therefore next uncouple either Hound [sc. George Monck and Prince Rupert], And loo them at two Hares ere one be found.
Alternative form of lanterloo
Alternative form of lanterloo: the card game.
- And my Intreagues ſo baſhfully diſown / That they may doubted be by few or none, / May kiſs the Cards at Picque, Hombre,—Lu, / And ſo be taught to kiſs the Lady too; [...]
- Ev'n mighty Pam that Kings and Queens o'erthrew, And mow'd down Armies in the Fights of Lu.
- Yet, ladies are seldom at ombre or lue sick.
The penalty paid to the pool in lanterloo for breaking certain rules or failing to take a…
The penalty paid to the pool in lanterloo for breaking certain rules or failing to take a trick.
An act that prompts such a penalty.
A game of lanterloo.
Any group of people.
To beat in the card game lanterloo.
- He was seldom indeed without two good trumps, and therefore almost invariably loo'd those who stood.
To pay a penalty to the pool for breaking certain rules or failing to take a trick in…
To pay a penalty to the pool for breaking certain rules or failing to take a trick in lanterloo.
To pay any penalty to any community.
A half-mask, particularly (historical) those velvet half-masks fashionable in the 17th…
A half-mask, particularly (historical) those velvet half-masks fashionable in the 17th century as a means of protecting women's complexion from the sun.
- Loo Mask. An half Mask.
A hot dust-bearing wind found in Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and the Punjab.
- It was a pitchy black night, as stifling as a June night can be, and the loo, the red-hot wind from the westward, was booming among the tinder-dry trees and pretending that the rain was on its heels.
A lieutenant.
- I asked my loo to let me escort you in. I wanted a moment to thank you personally.” “There's no need.” “So you said before, but there is. And was. I'll take you in to Lieutenant Ricchio.”
A surname.
The neighborhood
Vish — recursive loop
No curated loop yet for loo. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.
sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA