outhouse

noun, N Amer., an outdoor toilet that is enclosed but separate from the main building (COD)

“The boys teased the goat. And the goat had everybody treed. They were on top of the outhouses.”

“She couldn’t find a chamber pot or whatever and didn’t know where the outhouse was, so she used her shoe to pee in.”

“The other thing, historically we’ve never yet made enough out of this, they found the only two-storey outhouse in the province. We have a two-storey outhouse.”

“All that’s left of the place is the old toilet out in the outhouse.”

“There used to be a lot of outhouses upset.”
“Oh, always an outhouse.”

“In the wintertime, we’d light the lantern to go to the outhouse with. And we thought it was so much warmer when you had the lantern, if you could go out with a lantern.”

“They had, I guess, quite a nice orchard there below Sarah’s house. In the old days it was all outhouses in the city, and they’d draw the stuff out of the outhouses out and dump it on the ice. And they’d spend the winter drawing that home, and they’d have a hole behind every tree, and they’d dump this into the hole.”

“Well at the end of the sidewalk was the outhouse. One morning the captain spent the night on the boat… He was out smoking his pipe from the captain’s quarters and… he sees a line coming off the stern bits and wondered, ‘Well where in hell does that lead? That doesn’t make any sense, and it’s leading into the water…’ The other end was tied around Tom’s outhouse, waiting for the captain to spring the boat off and head to town [pulling the outhouse with it].”

“There was one at the little house that I bought. It never had any indoor plumbing. It had an outhouse, and it was still there when I bought it, and she had used it right up ’til she wasn’t able and had to go to a home in the city.”