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View synonyms for loo

loo

1

[ loo ]

noun

, plural loos.
  1. a card game in which forfeits are paid into a pool.
  2. the forfeit or sum paid into the pool.
  3. the fact of being looed.


verb (used with object)

, looed, loo·ing.
  1. to subject to a forfeit at loo.

loo

2

[ loo ]

noun

, British Informal.
, plural loos.

loo

3

[ loo ]

verb (used with or without object)

, Chiefly Northern U.S.
plural: looslooed looing

loo

4

[ loo ]

noun

looed looingplural: loos
  1. Scots. love.

loo

1

/ luː /

noun

  1. a gambling card game
  2. a stake used in this game


loo

2

/ luː /

noun

  1. an informal word for lavatory

loo

3

/ luː /

verb

  1. a variant spelling of lou

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Word History and Origins

Origin of loo1

First recorded in 1665–75; short for lanterloo, from Dutch lanterlu, from French lantur(e)lu, a special use of a meaningless refrain of an old song

Origin of loo2

First recorded in 1935–40; of uncertain origin; perhaps from French lieux (d'aisances) “latrines, toilets,” literally, “places of ease”; perhaps a pun on the place name Waterloo, based on water closet

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Word History and Origins

Origin of loo1

C17: shortened form of lanterloo, via Dutch from French lanterelu, originally a meaningless word from the refrain of a popular song

Origin of loo2

C20: perhaps from French lieux d'aisance water closet

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Example Sentences

He would laboriously make his way from desk to loo, belt down a few, then return.

While her English classmates were learning to wash their hands, Nadia was worried that the devil was leering at her on the loo.

“Several of them have said that they are drinking less than before, which is kind of logical,” Van Loo says.

Janneke van Loo, the regional manager for Rainbow, runs a park-cleaning group in East Amsterdam.

I was wearing a rather huge, billowy Maxi skirt and I must have lost track of exactly where it all was while on loo.

The third game, or lanterloo, is evidently the original form of the game now known as loo.

The partition planned at Loo was the partition of an ill governed empire which was not a nation.

The partition planned at Loo was therefore the very opposite of the partition of Poland.

Full powers must be sent to Loo, sealed, but with blanks left for the names of the plenipotentiaries.

It had been necessary to trust so many deputies and magistrates that rumours of what had been passing at Loo got abroad.

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