different between outhouse vs biffy
outhouse
English
Etymology
From Middle English outhous, equivalent to out- +? house. Compare Old Norse úthús (“outhouse”).
Noun
outhouse (plural outhouses)
- (Canada, US) An outbuilding—typically permanent—containing a toilet or seat over a cesspit.
- (dated) Any outbuilding: any small structure located apart from a main building.
- […] plenty of sand and cement had been found in one of the outhouses
Synonyms
- (outer building used for urination and defecation): See Thesaurus:outhouse
- (any small outer building): See outbuilding
Hypernyms
- house
Derived terms
- built like a brick outhouse
Translations
outhouse From the web:
- outhouse what does it mean
- outhouse meaning
- what is outhouse racing
- what are outhouses used for
- what is outhouse slang for
- what is outhouse hole
- what states are outhouses legal
- what does an outhouse look like
biffy
English
Etymology
(This etymology is missing or incomplete. Please add to it, or discuss it at the Etymology scriptorium.)
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /?b?.fi/
- Rhymes: -?fi
Noun
biffy (plural biffies)
- (US) A toilet
- (US) An outhouse
biffy From the web:
- what biffy clyro meaning
- biffy meaning
- what's biffy clyro
- what does biffy clyro mean
- what is buffy short for
- what is biffy clyro space about
- what is biffy clyro biggest hit
- what does biffy stand for
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- outhouse vs biffy
- outhouse vs penthouse
- outhouse vs appurtenance
- commode vs toiletrisers
- paraleipsis vs proslepsis
- paraleipsis vs paraleipses
- paraleipsis vs praeteritio
- apophasis vs paraleipsis
- mention vs paraleipsis
- omit vs paraleipsis
- ignore vs paraleipsis
- pretend vs paraleipsis
- paralipsis vs paraleipsis
- prolepsis vs proslepsis
- paralipsis vs proslepsis
- proslepsis vs apophasis
- praeteritio vs paralipsis
- paralipsis vs paralipses
- paralipsis vs paralepsis
- paralipsis vs apophasis