When a Bathroom is not a Bathroom

Well, it is not a bathroom if it does not have all the characteristics of a regular bathroom, meaning for example a bathtub. Public places do not have bathrooms but RESTROOMS and schools are in the list of "public places". It is then interesting to hear students asking permission "to go to the bathroom".
In order to avoid these situations it is advisable to make our students aware of this little but essential difference. We might as well give them options such as the use of the word TOILET, which is after all more appropriate, or to go for the option Canadians seem to prefer which is the word WASHROOM. WATER CLOSET (W.C.) is another possibility though this term indicates the "room" is really some sort of compartment and in the end you may have your student use the universal term LAVATORY that still in use and precedes all the others chronologically speaking.

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