dunny - significado y definición. Qué es dunny
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Qué (quién) es dunny - definición

A PLACE TO DEFACATE OFTEN LOCATED IN A SEPARATE SMALL BUILDING A BIT OFF
Dunny; Kybo; Outhouses; Earth-closet; Jakes (toilet); Shithouse; Draught-house; Outside toilet; House of ease; Dunnekin; Gingerbread-office; Gingerbread office; Shit-house; Dunnycan; Dunny can
  • date=November 2020}}, with each house having an outhouse or "dunny" in the back yard. The little sheds in each back yard are outhouses.
  • Log outhouse at a public-use cabin, [[Chena River State Recreation Area]], Alaska
  • Lake Providence]]
  • Outhouse in the mountains in northern [[Norway]]
  • A brick outhouse at [[Thomas Jefferson]]'s [[Poplar Forest]] estate near [[Lynchburg, Virginia]]
  • Outhouse with [[squat toilet]] inside (Poland)
  • Eight-seat stone outhouse at the [[Thomas Leiper Estate]] near [[Wallingford, Pennsylvania]]
  • Brittany]]
  •  Historical community [[sanitation]] poster promoting sanitary outhouse designs (Illinois, US, 1940)

dunny         
['d?ni]
¦ noun (plural dunnies) Austral./NZ informal a toilet.
Origin
C19 (in the sense 'dung'): from dialect dunnekin 'privy', prob. from dung + archaic sl. ken 'house'.
Dunny         
·adj Deaf; stupid.
outhouse         
(outhouses)
1.
An outhouse is a small building attached to a house or very close to the house, used, for example, for storing things in.
N-COUNT
2.
An outhouse is an outside toilet. (AM)
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Outhouse

An outhouse is a small structure, separate from a main building, which covers a toilet. This is typically either a pit latrine or a bucket toilet, but other forms of dry (non-flushing) toilets may be encountered. The term may also be used to denote the toilet itself, not just the structure.

Outhouses were in use in cities of developed countries (e.g. Australia) well into the second half of the twentieth century. They are still common in rural areas and also in cities of developing countries. Outhouses that are covering pit latrines in densely populated areas can cause groundwater pollution.

Increasingly, "outhouse" is used for a structure outside the main living property that is more permanent in build quality than a shed. In some localities and varieties of English, particularly outside North America, the term "outhouse" refers not to a toilet, but to outbuildings in a general sense: sheds, barns, workshops, etc.

Ejemplos de uso de dunny
1. I certainly wouldn‘t have gone to the dunny on my own with all the creepy crawlies about.
2. Preramble "Is anyone else looking forward to seeing the Aussies squirming like they‘ve just been bitten on the swingers by a dunny spider?" asks Paul Baker.
3. "With Dunny getting injured early in the game as well and Jiri Jarosik suffering a hamstring injury in training on Saturday, it just about sums our season up."
4. In the opening episode of the third series, Blackadder decides to buy the rotten borough of Dunny–on–the–Wold by treating its one voter, a farmer, with bribes of hen food, dog biscuits and cow ointment.