English edit

Etymology edit

From toilet +‎ -ed.

Adjective edit

toileted

  1. (rare) Having a toilet.
    • 1941 December 1, Fill Calhoun, “Life’s Reports: How Isolationist Is the Midwest?”, in Life, page 16:
      He thought that the people who had fed him rich foods, driven him about in new cars and opened up their majestically toileted homes to him were living expensively, even greedily, in a fool’s paradise.
    • 1997 November 20, John Roberts, “Tending Hilton Heads: Keynes’ economic theory of toilets”, in The Beaufort Gazette, volume 100, number 223, page 4A:
      Excessively toileted houses, Keynes noted, tend to require walls and gates and private guards to protect the porcelain treasure.
    • 2002, George E. Fogg, Park Guidelines for Off-Highway Vehicles: A Resource Guide to Assist in the Planning, Development, Enhancement, and Operation of OHV Recreation Facilities, National Office-Highway Vehicle Conservation Council, page 130:
      All toileted buildings must meet applicable accessibility standards.
    • 2022, Matthew Engel, The Way It Was: Life in Elizabeth’s Britain, 1952–79, Atlantic Books, published 2023, →ISBN:
      Then they could sit in their new toileted homes and watch the old-fashioned extroversion of such places on Coronation Street.
    • 2023, Parthasarathi Shome, The Creation of Poverty and Inequality in India: Exclusion, Isolation, Domination and Extraction, Bristol University Press, →ISBN, page 246:
      Paradoxically, open defecation areas were less polluted than densely toileted areas.

Verb edit

toileted

  1. simple past and past participle of toilet