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54 Sentences With "going to the toilet"

How to use going to the toilet in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "going to the toilet" and check conjugation/comparative form for "going to the toilet". Mastering all the usages of "going to the toilet" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Tourists are often unable to understand the many controls, finding going to the toilet more complicated than they thought.
Wu admitted to regularly playing the game for up to eight hours without eating, drinking or going to the toilet.
Before modafinil I could work for six hours, but I would be distracted—looking at my phone, making coffee, going to the toilet.
In a UK study, 99 percent of people visiting a public bathroom said they had washed their hands after going to the toilet.
But Beck was at Ailes's house in Cold Spring, going to the toilet, and noticed that there was a photograph behind the bathroom door.
One survey from worker rights platform Organise found that 74 percent of warehouse workers avoiding going to the toilet for fear of missing productivity goals.
Others have avoided eating and drinking for long stretches because going to the toilet meant discarding safety gowns that they would not be able to replace.
Participants will live in a single room in the research facility, and "eating, washing, showering, going to the toilet, leisure activities" will take place lying down. Yikes.
He compared corporate governance to star footballers washing their hands after going to the toilet: a nice idea, but less important than recruiting the best players for the team.
"People have to clock in and clock out even when going to the toilet and explain the reason why they were delayed, which is embarrassing and humiliating," Zaicev told VICE News.
"I've been coming to the theater since I was a kid and I remember you had a choice of buying a bag of sweets or going to the toilet," she said.
"At break of dawn or fall of dusk, these women face the risk of rape and/or kidnapping – an inconceivable threat for most of us when routinely going to the toilet," it added.
Many non-disease factors are known to affect the frequency of bowel motions including fluid intake, physical activity, diet, age, and social factors such as embarrassment in going to the toilet at work.
This week alone he's given a masterclass on going to the toilet on the International Space Station (ISS), perfected the art of making coffee, and now he's been improving his photography with some lessons.
In the 15-minute rant above, Oliver breaks down all the things "America's toughest Sheriff" has done while in power — from forcing prisoners to wear pink underwear to live-streaming them going to the toilet.
"They are particularly beneficial for transgender young people because otherwise transgender pupils often fear going to the toilet so much that they refuse to drink liquids during the day and experience dehydration," he told The Scotsman.
ASSISTED LIVING For those who find themselves unable to live independently, however, and need help with activities of daily living — which can include help with getting dressed, going to the toilet and sorting medications — this is an option.
The Houston, Texas, native has shared pictures of his bare ass sat on a fellow fighter's face mid-fight, as well as sharing his ultra-scientific weight cutting secrets which involve... Well, to spare you any unnecessarily gory details, going to the toilet.
In the same way that you don't know what it's like to fly, but a bird might say, "Oh poor you, you can't fly," but it's something that you've never done, and it's the same with me with going to the toilet.
The presence of other women in a run can offer a kind of solidarity, a diminished embarrassment derived from shared bodily experience, especially when it comes to the more intimate aspects of ultra-running, such as going to the toilet out in the open.
Mass demonstrations by women have occurred in Seoul every month as the country has been in a grip of spy cameras used to capture women and sometimes men undressing, going to the toilet, or in changing rooms which are then posted online at pornographic sites.
Symptoms of bowel cancer can include a change in your bowel habits, blood in stool, weight loss, pain in your abdomen or back, fatigue and feeling as though you need to strain your back package, even after going to the toilet, Cancer Research UK outlines.
There are lovingly detailed passages on the mechanics of going to the toilet and cleaning your teeth in orbit, the dangers of muscle wastage and other minutiae of life in zero gravity, but all the whizzy space business is harnessed to the basic question of what it means to leave and whether it's possible to come back.
In the original production the actors drank real alcohol on stage, the process of buying of rounds, consuming drink and going to the toilet being carefully plotted into the action.
Examining the effects of thought records and behavioral experiments in instigating belief change. Journal of behavior therapy and experimental psychiatry, 43(1), 540–547. Participants in the thought record condition were given a "normal" thought record not unlike the one described in the "Thought Record" section of this article and asked to come up with evidence for and against the following belief: "Not washing your hands after going to the toilet will make you ill." After this, they were asked to reflect on their own experiences of washing or not washing their hands after going to the toilet and to come up with a balanced alternative belief.
These were the first public pay toilets (free ones did not appear until later), and they caused great excitement. During the exhibition, 827,280 visitors paid one penny to use them; for the penny they got a clean seat, a towel, a comb, and a shoe shine. "To spend a penny" became a euphemism now archaic, for going to the toilet.
Hygiene education has increasingly focused on the close links between proper handwashing at critical times, like before eating and after going to the toilet, and improved health. In all cases WaterAid works closely with communities from the start. Particular attention is now being paid to engaging women. Since 1998 WaterAid has also been engaged in the slum areas of Addis Ababa.
Jonathan Thomson-Glover, a housemaster and former pupil, pleaded guilty to making covert films of children aged twelve to seventeen showering, changing, going to the toilet and conducting private acts, in the college itself and at an address in Cornwall. He was convicted at Taunton Crown Court and sentenced to three years and nine months' imprisonment after admitting to 36 counts of taking, making and possessing indecent images of children.
The song was used as the commercial song for DyDo Drinko's "Jonian Coffee" with Sugiyama starring in the commercial. The commercial was shot in Hawaii with a scene of a person catching a ball. On the evening of the shoot, Sugiyama drank too much beer at the hotel he was staying at and suffered from diarrhea. Even after going to the toilet, he still shot the remaining scenes.
Helen loves going to the toilet but only to escape her parents' rules. The complicated back of the toilet allows Helen to hide her comic books from her family's clutches so that her weak bladder excuses are more convincing. One morning, her mother orders her to clean up after breakfast and Helen starts to "feel" cramps. Her mother threatens that if she disobeyed, The Bogman will come for her.
Cuniraya then populated a local lake with the first fish, which he released into the ocean. When the mother returned and was informed by her daughters what had happened, she pursued Cuniraya. She told him that she wished to remove fleas from him, hoping to trick him and strike him with a rock. Cuniraya realised the ploy and left on the pretext of going to the toilet, escaping to other lands.
The intimate parts ( ', , ') of the human body which must, according to Islam, be covered by clothing. Exposing the intimate parts of the body is unlawful in Islam as the Quran instructs the covering of male and female genitals, and for adult females the breasts. Exposing them is normally considered sinful. Exposing intimate parts when needed, such as going to the toilet or bathing, falls under a specific set of rules.
Sugar goes into the toilets, and hands Kim the keys, telling her that she's looking for a shoebox in the wardrobe. Kim goes to Dmitri's flat and searches the flat for a wardrobe. At the club, Dmitri tells the women that he's going to the toilet, but instead leaves the club without telling them; the barkeep handing Sugar a large bill. Saint calls Kim, and she tells her that Dmitri is on her way home.
After that, the government embarked on a major public housing project in Hong Kong including public toilets for residents. More than ten people shared each toilet and they used them for bathing, doing their laundry as well as going to the toilet. Finally, in the 1970s, the government decided that one toilet for four or five families was insufficient and renovated all public housing providing separate flush pedestal toilets for all residents.
At The Great Exhibition at Hyde Park held from 1 May to 15 October 1851, George Jennings installed his Monkey Closets in the Retiring Rooms of The Crystal Palace. These were the first public toilets, and they caused great excitement. During the exhibition, 827,280 visitors paid one penny to use them; for the penny they got a clean seat, a towel, a comb and a shoe shine. "To spend a penny" became a euphemism for going to the toilet.
Rhys then decides to end their relationship but Sarah offers him a casual relationship, which he accepts, however she was unhappy with the agreement. Rhys takes naked photos of Sarah on his phone and boasted to Darren Osborne (Ashley Taylor Dawson). Going to the toilet, he leaves his phone on the table and Darren sends the photos to the SU Bar and publishes it in a lads magazine. Sarah discovers about the photos and finally, finishes with Rhys for good.
On 7 November 1903, the architect Silvanus Trevail committed suicide in the toilet of a train in the tunnel. Trevail caught the 11.40 up train from Truro, having purchased a third class ticket, a peculiar event as he typically travelled first class. At Par railway station he was witnessed leaving his seat and going to the toilet. As the train entered the Brownqueen tunnel, Trevail shot himself; when the train stopped at Bodmin Road, a porter was called, and Trevail’s body was found lying across the toilet.
Islamic toilet etiquette is a set of personal hygiene rules in Islam followed when going to the toilet. This code of Muslim hygienical jurisprudence is known as Qadaa' al-Haajah. The only requirement of the Qur'an is washing of one's hands and face with pure earth if water is not available.(verse 5:6) Issues of chirality (bodily symmetry), such as whether one uses the left or right hand, and which foot is used to step into or out of toilet areas, are derived from hadith sources.
The chair umpire throughout the match was the Swedish official Mohamed Lahyani. Lahyani said afterwards that he was so "gripped by the amazing match" that his concentration stayed solid and he did not think about eating or going to the toilet. On the second day of the match, two groups of 14 linespeople and four groups of 28 ballboys and ballgirls were used in a rotation. At the end of the match, Lahyani announced the score incorrectly, accidentally switching the scores of the two tie-break sets.
During June 1994, Doug found himself going to the toilet more often than normal, leading him to become worried about his health. Thinking something could be seriously wrong, he realised that he needed medical help but then refused to let the doctor examine him because she was female. It was down to Pam to convince him to let go of his "masculine pride" and allow the doctor to take a look. Doug learned that the problem was due to his prostate and was told that he needed to undergo an emergency operation.
There are even more practical issues for females, such as women/girls needing toilet paper, having to lower their pants, and sometimes tending to their menstrual hygiene needs while going to the toilet for urination. An alternative would be to accommodate urinals for both sexes in booths or to continue offering urinals for males only. However, this would at least limit the above-mentioned advantages of the urinals for females. Accordingly, the German lawyer and author Marcus Werner sees a significant disadvantage in unisex toilets if these would lead to the elimination of urinals in classic open rows.
The novel is set in Sutherland Shire in the 1970s. Deb and Sue are thirteen-year-old high-school students whose lives are about male surfers, panel vans, straight-leg Levis, skipping school, getting wasted and fitting in. The girls strive to become "surfie chicks", the groupies that hang around the surfer-boy gangs of southern Sydney. Adhering to rules that prevent them from eating or going to the toilet in the surfers' presence, the girls manage to become members of the most prestigious gang, and are assigned boyfriends, but to the boys they are just sexual objects.
There are other practical issues for females, such as women/girls needing toilet paper, having to lower their pants, and sometimes tending to their menstrual hygiene needs while going to the toilet for urination. An alternative would be to accommodate urinals for both sexes in cubicles or to continue to offer them only in public toilets for males. However, this would at least limit the above-mentioned advantages of urinals. Urinals arranged in cubicles have rarely been installed; the advantages over conventional toilets were not obvious because the same space would still be required in the new arrangement.
Prisoners had no privacy in going to the toilet and the toilets would emit a strong stench because they were flushed with salt water. Hot water faucets were not installed until the early 1960s, shortly before closure. The penitentiary established a very strict regimen of rules and regulations under the title "the Rules and Regulations for the Government and Discipline of the United States Penal and Correctional Institutions" and also a "Daily Routine of Work and Counts" to be followed by the prisoners and also the guards. Copies of these were provided to the prisoners to read and follow.
On the coach home, after Owd Grandad had been drinking excessively, he falls asleep without going to the toilet before the 200-mile journey. After waking up while the coach was on the M1 motorway he realises that he needs to urinate and hassles the driver to leave the motorway. The driver eventually stops the coach by a wall on a country road and Owd Grandad runs up and jumps over it only to discover that it was, in fact, a canal bridge and plunges into the water below. He is, however, okay and gets back on the bus after a verbal assault directed at the driver.
In the majority of episodes she wears her netball cardigan with a white or pastel T-shirt; for special occasions, like Christmas or her wedding, she dresses up. Despite weight issues and inability to find love, Sharon doesn't have self- consciousness in the mirror. Sharon appears as a great person on the inside, always caring for others despite the lack of love and care (for her) in her own life. In Kath & Kimderella, Sharon goes on the Orlando Bloom diet and after going to the toilet loses a large amount of weight; during the show's hiatus, Magda Szubanski had gone on the Jenny Craig diet and lost a lot of weight.
A type of wight from Northern Sweden called Vittra lives underground, is invisible most of the time and has its own cattle. Most of the time Vittra are rather distant and do not meddle in human affairs, but are fearsome when enraged. This can be achieved by not respecting them properly, for example by neglecting to perform certain rituals (such as saying "look out" when putting out hot water or going to the toilet so they can move out of the way) or building your home too close to or, even worse, on top of their home, disturbing their cattle or blocking their roads. They can make your life very very miserable or even dangerous – they do whatever it takes to drive you away, even arrange accidents that will harm or even kill you.
The Sagas of Icelanders, Bishops' sagas, and contemporary sagas, whose portrayal of the supernatural is generally restrained, rarely mention álfar, and then only in passing. But although limited, these texts provide some of the best evidence for the presence of elves in everyday beliefs in medieval Scandinavia. They include a fleeting mention of elves seen out riding in 1168 (in Sturlunga saga); mention of an álfablót ("elves' sacrifice") in Kormáks saga; and the existence of the euphemism ganga álfrek ('go to drive away the elves') for "going to the toilet" in Eyrbyggja saga. The Kings' sagas include a rather elliptical but widely studied account of an early Swedish king being worshipped after his death and being called Ólafr Geirstaðaálfr ('Ólafr the elf of Geirstaðir'), and a demonic elf at the beginning of Norna-Gests þáttr.
Mr Jennings, a gardener and bricklayer, sued the administrators of his former employer, for a large house and furniture (worth £435,000) on the ground that he had been given an assurance he would get it. Jennings worked as gardener of Mrs Royle since 1970 and from the late 1980s had increasingly begun to care for her, doing washing (laundry), helping dressing, shopping, overnight security following a break-in and in going to the toilet. She was running out of money and could not continue to pay him. She told him he need not worry about that since “he would be alright” and with more doubt expressed by the court, as to the claimant's recollection of exact words, perhaps words to the effect that “this will all be yours one day”, if not the court deemed then similar promises.
Consumer research released in October 2019, found that more than 20% of Australians admitted that they didn’t always wash their hands after using the toilet and nearly 40% of respondents stated they didn’t always wash before handling food. A further 43% of Australian adults say they don’t always wash after handing raw eggs. The research showed gender differences, as men were less likely than women to always wash hands after going to the toilet (76% of men versus 82% of women) and before touching food (59% men versus 66% women). People under age 34 were less likely to wash their hands. A previous 2007 study found that 97 per cent of Australians knew that washing their hands before handling food is essential, this compared with 54 per cent who didn’t wash their hands in 1997 – a 43 per cent improvement.
Show producer David Goodman received many telephone calls complaining about the scene where Peter attempts to seduce his son Chris, mistakenly believing him to be his wife, Lois. The scene was believed by some viewers to be encouraging child molestation. The show also received at least one letter of complaint regarding the scene where Quagmire watches Lois going to the toilet; screenwriter Chris Sheridan comments on the DVD commentary that the number of complaints about this scene exceeded one. It is prohibited on Fox to use the term 'Jesus Christ' without actually referring to the person himself, and so in the scene in which God vaporises a person and exclaims "Jesus Christ", it was necessary for Jesus to physically appear before the two run away in order for the scene to be suitable for television airing.
Abrahamian, Tortured Confessions 1999, p. 5 Torture techniques used in the Islamic Republic include: > whipping, sometimes of the back but most often of the feet with the body > tied on an iron bed; the qapani; deprivation of sleep; suspension from > ceiling and high walls; twisting of forearms until they broke; crushing of > hands and fingers between metal presses; insertion of sharp instruments > under the fingernails; cigarette burns; submersion under water; standing in > one place for hours on end; mock executions; and physical threats against > family members. Of these, the most prevalent was the whipping of soles, > obviously because it was explicitly sanctioned by the sharia.Abrahamian, > Tortured Confessions, 1999, p. 139 Two "innovations" in torture not borrowed from the Shah's regime were: > the ‘coffin’, and compulsory watching of and even participation in > executions. Some were placed in small cubicles, [50cm x 80cm x 140cm (20 > inches x 31.5 inches x 55 inches)] blindfolded and in absolute silence, for > 17-hour stretches with two 15-minute breaks for eating and going to the > toilet.
Family tree of the Abbasid dynasty in the middle and late 9th century Talha, commonly known by the teknonym Abu Ahmad, was the son of the Caliph Ja'far al-Mutawakkil () and a slave concubine, Umm Ishaq. In 861, he was present in his father's murder at Samarra by the Turkish military slaves (ghilman): the historian al-Tabari reports that he had been drinking with his father that night, and came upon the assassins while going to the toilet, but after a brief attempt to protect the caliph, he retired to his own rooms when he realized that his efforts were futile. The murder was almost certainly instigated by al-Mutawakkil's son and heir, al-Muntasir, who immediately ascended the throne; nevertheless Abu Ahmad's own role in the affair is suspect as well, given his close ties later on with the Turkish military leaders. According to Hugh N. Kennedy, "it is possible, therefore, that Abu Ahmad had already had close links with the young Turks before the murder, or that they were forged on that night".
Abrahamian, Tortured Confessions 1999, p.5 Torture techniques used in the Islamic Republic include: > whipping, sometimes of the back but most often of the feet with the body > tied on an iron bed; the qapani; deprivation of sleep; suspension from > ceiling and high walls; twisting of forearms until they broke; crushing of > hands and fingers between metal presses; insertion of sharp instruments > under the fingernails; cigarette burns; submersion under water; standing in > one place for hours on end; mock executions; and physical threats against > family members. Of these, the most prevalent was the whipping of soles, > obviously because it was explicitly sanctioned by the sharia.Abrahamian, > Tortured Confessions, 1999, p.139 Two "innovations" in torture not borrowed from the Shah's regime were > the ‘coffin’, and compulsory watching of – and even participation in – > executions. Some were placed in small cubicles, [50cm x 80cm x 140cm (20 > inches x 31.5 inches x 55 inches)] blindfolded and in absolute silence, for > 17-hour stretches with two 15-minute breaks for eating and going to the > toilet.

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