Concept cluster: Tools > Waste management
n
A dining hall or refectory.
n
An amount carried by an ass or donkey.
n
Alternative spelling of bagman [(informal) A person who collects, transports, or distributes illicit money, especially for the purpose of bribery, extortion, or the making of other improper payments.]
n
(archaic) The common beet, Beta vulgaris.
n
(US) An outhouse
n
(less common) Alternative spelling of bin man [(Britain) A man with the job of collecting refuse from people's homes and transporting it to a refuse tip for processing.]
n
An illegal trader of goods, especially of alcohol.
n
Alternative form of bottleman [A man who aids a boxer by passing him a bottle of water to drink during a fight.]
n
(uncountable) The work or role of a butler.
n
A large room, usually in a school, used as both a cafeteria and an auditorium.
v
(MLE, transitive) To stab with a knife, to shank.
n
(US, obsolete) A break room in a public building or worksite
n
A concessions stand.
n
(US, slang, obsolete) A place or device for urination and defecation: an outhouse or chamber pot.
n
A room, in a home or hotel, where meals are eaten. Some restaurants provide private dining rooms for hire, away from the main public eating areas.
v
(transitive) To provide (someone) with a dinner; to dine.
n
(Scotland, Northern England, slang, dated) A passageway, particularly those connecting an outhouse to the main building.
n
Alternative form of dunny man [(Australia, colloquial, now chiefly historical) Someone employed to empty the cesspit from a basic toilet which is not attached to a plumbing system.]
n
(now chiefly Australia, slang) A place to urinate and defecate: an outhouse or lavatory.
n
(uncountable) Food and drink.
n
(historical) A load: various English units of weight or volume based upon standardized cartloads of certain commodities, generally around 1000 kg.
n
Alternative form of garbage man [(Australia, US, Canada) Someone, usually male, whose job it is to collect refuse from people's homes and take it to be processed.]
n
(US, slang) A morgue.
adj
Having a kiosk.
n
(informal, chiefly UK) A very untidy house or room.
n
(obsolete and rare) A place used for urination and defecation: a latrine; an outhouse; a lavatory.
n
A cool room in a domestic house where food is stored, but larger than a pantry.
n
A box used to provide a soiling area for (usually) pet cats, generally filled with kitty litter, sand, clay chips, etc.
n
(ecology) A bag for the collection of litterfall.
n
Alternative spelling of litter box [A box used to provide a soiling area for (usually) pet cats, generally filled with kitty litter, sand, clay chips, etc.]
n
(US, politics) Synonym of lunchbox Democrat
n
Someone who works in a malthouse.
n
(informal, humorous) A part of a home specifically reserved for adult male activities, such as drinking beer, playing games and watching TV; often a garage or den.
n
(sometimes capitalized) Long-standing nickname of a complicated, seemingly man-made excavation on Oak Island in Nova Scotia, Canada, rumored to contain pirate treasure and which has been repeatedly and unsuccessfully probed at great expense.
n
A keeper of the pantry; a pantler.
n
A person in charge of the pantry, or food store, on a ship, train, or other transport where food is kept for passengers and crew. Also in a hospital, school, or hotel, etc.
n
A man whose occupation is digging peat.
n
(slang, vulgar) A building that houses toilets or urinals.
n
(Britain, informal) A ploughman's lunch.
n
(Britain) Alternative spelling of potman [(Britain) A man employed in a public house to collect empty pots or glasses; a waiter in a similar establishment.]
n
The operator of such a machine; a potcherman
n
One who operates a potcher.
n
The act of one who potters.
n
(now historical) A man with his own fireplace where a pot of water could be boiled, thus qualifying him to vote in a parliamentary election in certain English boroughs before the 1832 Reform Act.
n
Alternative form of pumpman [A man employed to operate a pump, as in a mine.]
n
(rare and obsolete, euphemistic) A peaceful, quiet place in which to urinate and defecate: an outhouse; a lavatory.
n
(India, historical) A native who loitered about the wharves of Calcutta seeking employment as a servant with newly arrived Europeans.
n
(New Zealand, Australia, Canada) A rumpus room.
n
(Cockney rhyming slang, Australian rhyming slang) Yank (American person).
n
(obsolete) A kind of inferior hearse.
n
A box used to store a stash of something, especially illicit narcotics.
n
(UK, dialect) A man who breeds, or deals in, tups.
n
(euphemistic, archaic) A place in which to urinate and defecate: an outhouse; a lavatory.
n
A building that houses a village's only running water for drinking, washing, and showering.
n
Alternative spelling of water boy [A man or boy who regularly supplies a sports team or other group with drinking water.]
n
(Britain, colloquial, slang) A small enterprise which is very simple to run.
n
The room or building where a cider press is stored.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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