[go: nahoru, domu]

See also: siege-house and siege house

English

edit

Alternative forms

edit

Etymology

edit

From siege (seat, toilet seat) + house.[1]

Noun

edit

siegehouse (plural siegehouses)

  1. (euphemistic, obsolete) An outbuilding with toilet seats: an outhouse.
    • 1440, Coventry Leet Book, page 194:
      The sege houses in þe West~orcherd were graunte to hym.
    • 1519, W. Horman, chapter XIX, in Vulgaria, page 170:
      A segehouse wold be vnder the open aire betwene two wallis.

Synonyms

edit

Hypernyms

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "siege, n." in the Oxford English Dictionary (1910), Oxford: Oxford University Press.