German where is the bathroom




















Toilet Fact 1: The restroom will be either downstairs or upstairs. Rarely will you find a restroom in a restaurant or bar on the ground floor. Train station pay WCs tend to be downstairs. Elevators for the upstairs or downstairs restroom are rare. Toilet Fact 2: You will probably have to pay to use a public toilet in Germany.

The normal rate is 50 euro cents, but some places charge up to a euro. Airports are the rare exception to the pay-to-pee rule. Some smaller pubs and restaurants even charge patrons to use the facilities, but this is thankfully rare. Unlike airports, train stations and autobahn rest stops in Germany often have commercial pay toilets that charge a flat rate from 70 euro cents to a euro for entry.

Toilet Fact 3: German toilet stalls tend to be very private, almost hermetically sealed. Germans find American toilet stalls odd — with side walls that have a foot or more of open space above the floor. Many German toilet stall walls go completely down to the floor, or very close to the floor.

You could drop dead in some German toilet enclosures and no one would know for days. Toilet Fact 4: The toilet attendant Most public toilets have an attendant. Sign In. Start Your Free Trial. Now Studying Survival Phrases Completed. Where is the Bathroom? Mark Complete.

Now Playing: Lesson Audio. Or sign up using Facebook. By clicking Join Now, you agree to our Terms of Use , Privacy Policy , and to receive our email communications, which you may opt out at any time.

Already a Member? Sign In Here. M: Hello and welcome to German Survival Phrases brought to you by germanpod You will be surprised at how far a little German will go. Now before we jump in, remember to stop by germanpod If you stop by, be sure to leave us a comment. F: German Survival Phrases.

Lesson 6. Where is the bathroom? The first word [Wo] means where. There are also very few public toilets in Germany. One of the most polite way to ask this is [Darf ich die Toilette benutzen?

In some instances, only the German words are written on the doors. What to do, what to do? Well you can stop by the website and find the words for man and woman there. Find them inside the PDF or if you have an iPod, click the center button and you can find them there. The word for men is [Mann] or [Herr]. The word for woman is [Frau] or [Dame]. You are eating in a restaurant and you find that you need to use the restroom. You simply ask your host [Wo ist die Toilette] or maybe you are out sightseeing in the city and again you need to find a bathroom.

I provide you with the English equivalent of the phrase and you are responsible for shouting it out aloud. You have a few seconds before I give you the answer. F: Where is the toilet [Wo ist die Toilette? Hide All. Please Sign In to leave a comment. Leave a comment Enter your name. Sorry, please keep your comment under characters. You will find a toilet brush next to every German toilet and you shall use it. I am serious. For more information about toilets and dirty business, read about them here.

Glass-paneled showers are very, very popular second place is for the plastic curtains and they are not advised for those of us who are lazy because you have to clean them up thoroughly every time you take a shower.

You think a quick 10 min shower is possible? But let us forget the showers because the real star in German bathrooms are the bathtubs. It does not matter if the bathroom is so closet sized your knees touch your chin when you sit on the toilet, there will be a bathtub inside it. When Germans must choose between the shower and the tub, they will choose the tub and shower on top of it when needed.

Middle Easterners have sit-down toilets, but they use a watering can type device to wash their bottoms after they use the toilet. Regardless of the specifics, you will definitely want to know how to ask where the bathroom is, you can figure out the details when you get there. It seems that there are almost as many different bathroom practices as there are languages in which to ask where bathrooms might be.

Here are some ways different English speaking countries ask the question.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000