gents'
Appearance
English
[edit]Noun
[edit]- possessive case of gents: belonging to some or all gents.
- 1898, The Hotel/Motor Hotel Monthly, volume 6, page 27:
- 2012, Roopa Farooki, The Flying Man[1], page 137:
- ...our modern man in Hong Kong excuses himself to go to the gents'. The broad window overlooking the lights of Hong Kong in the gents' loo is astonishingly elevated too, and as he relieves himself, gazing out into the night of diamond dust, across the fairy glimmering of the city, he feels something shift in a subtle way...
- Synonym of men's room: a lavatory intended for use by men.
- 2004, David Nobbs, Sex and Other Changes[2], page 95:
- 2007, Julia Niebuhr Eulenberg, "Hold the Salad" in I Should Have Stayed Home: Food, page 68 f.:
- 2012, Roopa Farooki, The Flying Man[3], page 137:
- ...our modern man in Hong Kong excuses himself to go to the gents'. The broad window overlooking the lights of Hong Kong in the gents' loo is astonishingly elevated too, and as he relieves himself, gazing out into the night of diamond dust, across the fairy glimmering of the city, he feels something shift in a subtle way...
- 2014, Trevor Dalton, Rhyme for Reason[4], page 102:
- When he was quite satisfied with his handiwork, The Poet opened the toilet window, and then walked quickly from the gents' into the ladies'.
Usage notes
[edit]In reference to lavatories, now much more common in British English without the apostrophe: gents.
Synonyms
[edit]- men's; gents (UK); see also Thesaurus:bathroom
Coordinate terms
[edit]Derived terms
[edit]- gents (as a lavatory)