b3ta.com qotw
You are not logged in. Login or Signup
Home » Question of the Week » Common » Post 280209 | Search
This is a question Common

Freddy Woo writes, "My wife thinks calling the front room a lounge is common. Worse, a friend of hers recently admonished her daughter for calling a toilet, a toilet. Lavatory darling. It's lavatory."

My own mother refused to let me use the word 'oblong' instead of 'rectangle'. Which is just odd, to be honest.

What stuff do you think is common?

(, Thu 16 Oct 2008, 16:06)
Pages: Latest, 31, 30, 29, 28, 27, ... 1

« Go Back

Reading on the toilet.
Surely this peaceful practice is common in both senses of the word. What defines ones class must therefore be the choice of reading material on offer.

/Discuss.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 9:57, 17 replies)
one of my friends keeps the Profanisaurus by his toilet
Appropriate, I think
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 9:59, closed)
OK!!!!111!! magazine etc.
My wife has the bare-faced audacity to pollute my throne room with this mind crushing cack.

I'm not a football fan and wouldn't know a Tommy Hilfinger from a Coochie. I really couldn't give a flying tossbucket that some third-division gurning fuckwit has married an orange, meringue wearing harridan.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 10:07, closed)
A book of funny quotations
By the likes of Oscar Wilde and such. Its from Past Times as well..

Am I classy? Am I? Am I?
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 10:02, closed)
Certainly
I currently enjoy a page or three of Bleak House while defecating. That would be pretty balanced, but thee fact that I bought the book from Aldi and it has an illustrated cover tips me into the realms of white-trash, I fear.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 10:15, closed)
I am trying to convince my wife that a bookshelf in the downstairs toilet
is a good idea.

I can't go unless I'm reading and I am sure I'm not the only one. Sometimes its a scrabble for a shampoo bottle before I sit but I have to read something.

I have a wide selection of reading material on the radiator and the moment including, a couple of Gary Larson books I no longer find funny, The doubtful guest, the melancholy story of oyster boy, the little book of bunny suicides, the current months bizarre magazine, and several others.

However nothing has ever beaten the quality of read that is the back of a shampoo bottle.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 10:32, closed)
I too have the need to read!
I usually have a couple of new scientists or something to keep me company on the crapper. I actually had to hide some reading materials in my girlfriends toilet after I knew all her shampoos etc by heart.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 12:19, closed)
Viz...
...is the best form of toilet humour.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 11:08, closed)
currently on the library ( - shelf below the window)
is
The Daily Show presents America (useful for quick quips in urgent times).
Simon Singh - The Code Book
Stephen Hawking - God created the Integers
Ben Goldacre - Bad Science.

Though other titles do appear from time to time, and some of the above are frequently "lent out" to other parts of the house. I find that I can sometimes "forget the purpose of my visit" and be found in the peace and quiet of the small study.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 11:18, closed)
Book
It's really the only chance I'll ever have of getting through The Illuminatus Trilogy!
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 11:20, closed)
What about using a laptop?
How many b3tards have posted whilst having a poo? Own up.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 11:41, closed)
Pornography?
Reading it on the loo is ok isn't it?
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 11:50, closed)
was this meant to be funny?
did I miss something somewhere?
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 12:27, closed)
Your reply was actually funny!
.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 12:31, closed)
LOLZ!!!!!!
How very droll.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 12:58, closed)
only if it's scat
Then it becomes hideously ironic.
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 13:58, closed)
And the genre's called. . . .
. . . shitterature
(, Tue 21 Oct 2008, 15:11, closed)

The Kite household has a magazine rack by their toilet with a wide range of literature in it. And we're dead posh.
(, Wed 22 Oct 2008, 18:55, closed)

« Go Back

Pages: Latest, 31, 30, 29, 28, 27, ... 1