Synonyms of the word stool


STOOLACQUIRE - CAN - COMMODE - CRAP - CRAPPER - DEFECATE - DEJECTION - DEVELOP - EGEST - ELIMINATE - ENTICE - EXCREMENT - EXCRETA - EXCRETE - EXCRETION - FAECES - FECES - GET - GROW - LURE - MAKE - ORDURE - PASS - POT - POTTY - PRODUCE - REACT - RESPOND - SEAT - SHIT - STUMP - TEMPT - THRONE - TILLER - TOILET

stool

  • n. A seat for one person without a back or armrest, particularly.
  • n. (chiefly medicine) Feces, excrement.
  • n. (chiefly medicine) A production of feces or excrement, an act of defecation, stooling: a shit.
  • n. (archaic) A decoy.
  • n. (nautical) A small channel on the side of a vessel, for the deadeyes of the backstays.
  • n. (US, dialect) Material, such as oyster shells, spread on the sea bottom for oyster spat to adhere to.
  • v. (chiefly medicine) To produce stool, to defecate.
  • v. (horticulture) To cut down (a plant) until its main stem is close to the ground, resembling a stool, to…
  • n. A plant from which layers are propagated by bending its branches into the soil.
  • v. (agriculture) To ramify; to tiller, as grain; to shoot out suckers.

acquire

  • v. (transitive) To get.
  • v. (transitive) To gain, usually by one's own exertions; to get as one's own.
  • v. (medicine) To contract.
  • v. (computing) To sample signals and convert them into digital values.

can

  • v. (modal auxiliary verb, defective) To know how to; to be able to.
  • v. (modal auxiliary verb, defective, informal) May; to be permitted or enabled to.
  • v. (modal auxiliary verb, defective) To be possible, usually with be.
  • v. (obsolete, transitive) To know.
  • n. A more or less cylindrical vessel for liquids, usually of steel or aluminium.
  • n. A container used to carry and dispense water for plants (a watering can).
  • n. A tin-plate canister, often cylindrical, for preserved foods such as fruit, meat, or fish.
  • n. (archaic) A chamber pot, now (US, slang) a toilet.
  • n. (US, slang) A place with a toilet: a lavatory.
  • n. (US, slang) Buttocks.
  • n. (slang) Jail or prison.
  • n. (slang) Headphones.
  • n. (obsolete) A drinking cup.
  • n. (nautical) A cube-shaped buoy or marker used to denote a port-side lateral mark.
  • v. To preserve, by heating and sealing in a can or jar.
  • v. to discard, scrap or terminate (an idea, project, etc.).
  • v. To shut up.
  • v. (US, euphemistic) To fire or dismiss an employee.

commode

  • n. A low chest of drawers on short legs.
  • n. A stand for a washbowl and jug.
  • n. (euphemistic) A chair containing a chamber pot.
  • n. (euphemistic) A toilet.
  • n. (historical) A kind of woman's headdress, raising the hair and fore part of the cap to a great height.

crap

  • n. (obsolete) The husk of grain; chaff.
  • n. (slang, mildly vulgar) Something of poor quality.
  • n. (slang, mildly vulgar) Something that is rubbish; nonsense.
  • n. (slang, mildly vulgar) Faeces or feces.
  • n. (slang, mildly vulgar, countable) An act of defecation.
  • n. (slang, mildly vulgar) Useless object or entity.
  • n. (slang, vulgar, in the plural) diarrhea.
  • v. (vulgar, slang) To defecate.
  • adj. (chiefly Britain, colloquial, somewhat vulgar) Of poor quality.
  • interj. (slang) Expression of worry, fear, shock, surprise, disgust, annoyance or dismay.
  • n. (gambling, dice games) A losing throw of 2, 3 or 12 in craps.

crapper

  • n. (vulgar slang) A chamber pot or toilet, particularly (dated) a flush toilet by Thomas Crapper.
  • n. (vulgar slang) A lavatory or outhouse.
  • adj. comparative form of crap: more crap.
  • n. A half-glass of whiskey.

defecate

  • v. (intransitive) To expel feces from one's bowels.
  • v. (now rare) To purify, to clean of dregs etc.
  • v. (now rare, transitive) To purge; to pass (something) as excrement.
  • adj. (obsolete) Freed from pollutants, dregs, lees, etc.; refined; purified.

dejection

  • n. A state of melancholy or depression; low spirits, the blues.
  • n. The act of humbling or abasing oneself.
  • n. A low condition; weakness; inability.
  • n. (medicine, archaic) Defecation or feces.

develop

  • v. (intransitive) To change with a specific direction, progress.
  • v. (transitive, intransitive) To progress through a sequence of stages.
  • v. (transitive) To advance; to further; to promote the growth of.
  • v. (transitive) To create.
  • v. (transitive) To bring out images latent in photographic film.
  • v. (transitive) To acquire something usually over a period of time.
  • v. (chess, transitive) To place one's pieces actively.
  • v. (snooker, pool) To cause a ball to become more open and available to be played on later. Usually by moving…
  • v. (mathematics) To change the form of (an algebraic expression, etc.) by executing certain indicated operations…

egest

  • v. To excrete from the body.

eliminate

  • v. (transitive) To completely destroy (something) so that it no longer exists.
  • v. (slang) To kill (a person or animal).
  • v. (physiology) To excrete (waste products).
  • v. To exclude (from investigation or from further competition).
  • v. (accounting) To record amounts in a consolidation statement to remove the effects of inter-company transactions.

entice

  • v. (transitive) To lure; to attract by arousing desire or hope.

excrement

  • n. (now specifically) Human and animal solid waste excreted from the bowels; feces.
  • n. (archaic) Any waste matter excreted from the human or animal body, or discharged by bodily organs.
  • n. (obsolete) Something which grows out of the body; hair, nails etc.

excreta

  • n. Human bodily waste which is excreted from the body.

excrete

  • v. (of an organism) to discharge from the system.

excretion

  • n. The process of removing or ejecting material that has no further utility, especially from the body; the…
  • n. Something being excreted in that manner, especially urine or feces.

faeces

  • n. British spelling standard spelling of feces.

feces

  • n. Digested waste material (typically solid or semi-solid) discharged from the bowels; excrement.

get

  • v. (transitive) To obtain; to acquire.
  • v. (transitive) To receive.
  • v. (transitive, in a perfect construction, with present-tense meaning) To have. See usage notes.
  • v. (copulative) To become.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to become; to bring about.
  • v. (transitive) To fetch, bring, take.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to do.
  • v. (intransitive, with various prepositions, such as into, over, or behind; for specific idiomatic senses…
  • v. (transitive) To cover (a certain distance) while travelling.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to come or go or move.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to be in a certain status or position.
  • v. (intransitive) To begin (doing something).
  • v. (transitive) To take or catch (a scheduled transportation service).
  • v. (transitive) To respond to (a telephone call, a doorbell, etc).
  • v. (intransitive, followed by infinitive) To be able, permitted (to do something); to have the opportunity…
  • v. (transitive, informal) To understand. (compare get it).
  • v. (transitive, informal) To be subjected to.
  • v. (informal) To be. Used to form the passive of verbs.
  • v. (transitive) To become ill with or catch (a disease).
  • v. (transitive, informal) To catch out, trick successfully.
  • v. (transitive, informal) To perplex, stump.
  • v. (transitive) To find as an answer.
  • v. (transitive, informal) To bring to reckoning; to catch (as a criminal); to effect retribution.
  • v. (transitive) To hear completely; catch.
  • v. (transitive) To getter.
  • v. (now rare) To beget (of a father).
  • v. (archaic) To learn; to commit to memory; to memorize; sometimes with out.
  • v. (imperative, informal) Used with a personal pronoun to indicate that someone is being pretentious or grandiose.
  • v. (imperative, informal) Go away; get lost.
  • v. (euphemistic) To kill.
  • v. (intransitive, obsolete) To make acquisitions; to gain; to profit.
  • n. Offspring.
  • n. Lineage.
  • n. (sports, tennis) A difficult return or block of a shot.
  • n. Something gained.
  • n. (Britain, regional) A git.
  • n. (Judaism) A Jewish writ of divorce.

grow

  • v. (ergative) To become bigger.
  • v. (intransitive) To appear or sprout.
  • v. (transitive) To cause or allow something to become bigger, especially to cultivate plants.
  • v. (copulative) To assume a condition or quality over time.
  • v. (intransitive, obsolete) To become attached or fixed; to adhere.

lure

  • n. Something that tempts or attracts, especially one with a promise of reward or pleasure.
  • n. (fishing) An artificial bait attached to a fishing line to attract fish.
  • n. A bunch of feathers attached to a line, used in falconry to recall the hawk.
  • n. A velvet smoothing brush.
  • v. To attract by temptation etc.; to entice.
  • v. To recall a hawk with a lure.

make

  • v. (transitive, heading) To create.
  • v. (intransitive, now mostly colloquial) To behave, to act.
  • v. (intransitive) To tend; to contribute; to have effect; with for or against.
  • v. To constitute.
  • v. (intransitive, construed with of, typically interrogative) To interpret.
  • v. (transitive, usually stressed) To bring into success.
  • v. (transitive, second object is an adjective or participle) To cause to be.
  • v. To cause to appear to be; to represent as.
  • v. (transitive, second object is a verb) To cause (to do something); to compel (to do something).
  • v. (transitive, second object is a verb, can be stressed for emphasis or clarity) To force to do.
  • v. (transitive, of a fact) To indicate or suggest to be.
  • v. (transitive, of a bed) To cover neatly with bedclothes.
  • v. (transitive, US slang) To recognise, identify.
  • v. (transitive, colloquial) To arrive at a destination, usually at or by a certain time.
  • v. (intransitive, colloquial) To proceed (in a direction).
  • v. (transitive) To cover (a given distance) by travelling.
  • v. (transitive) To move at (a speed).
  • v. To appoint; to name.
  • v. (transitive, slang) To induct into the Mafia or a similar organization (as a made man).
  • v. (intransitive, colloquial, euphemistic) To defecate or urinate.
  • v. (transitive) To earn, to gain (money, points, membership or status).
  • v. (transitive) To pay, to cover (an expense); chiefly used after expressions of inability.
  • v. (obsolete, intransitive) To compose verses; to write poetry; to versify.
  • v. To enact; to establish.
  • v. To develop into; to prove to be.
  • v. To form or formulate in the mind.
  • v. (obsolete) To act in a certain manner; to have to do; to manage; to interfere; to be active; often in…
  • v. (obsolete) To increase; to augment; to accrue.
  • v. (obsolete) To be engaged or concerned in.
  • v. (now archaic) To cause to be (in a specified place), used after a subjective what.
  • v. (transitive, euphemistic) To take the virginity of.
  • n. (often of a car) Brand or kind; often paired with model.
  • n. How a thing is made; construction.
  • n. Origin of a manufactured article; manufacture.
  • n. (uncountable) Quantity produced, especially of materials.
  • n. (dated) The act or process of making something, especially in industrial manufacturing.
  • n. A person's character or disposition.
  • n. (bridge) The declaration of the trump for a hand.
  • n. (physics) The closing of an electrical circuit.
  • n. (computing) A software utility for automatically building large applications, or an implementation of…
  • n. (slang) Recognition or identification, especially from police records or evidence.
  • n. (slang, usually in phrase "easy make") Past or future target of seduction (usually female).
  • n. (slang, military) A promotion.
  • n. A home-made project.
  • n. (basketball) A made basket.
  • n. (dialectal) Mate; a spouse or companion.
  • n. (Scotland, Ireland, Northern England, now rare) A halfpenny.

ordure

  • n. Excrement; dung.

pass

  • v. (heading) Physical movement.
  • v. (heading) To change in state or status, to advance.
  • v. (heading) To move through time.
  • v. (heading) To be accepted.
  • v. (intransitive) In any game, to decline to play in one's turn.
  • v. (heading) To do or be better.
  • v. (intransitive, obsolete) To take heed.
  • n. An opening, road, or track, available for passing; especially, one through or over some dangerous or otherwise…
  • n. A channel connecting a river or body of water to the sea, for example at the mouth (delta) of a river.
  • n. A single movement, especially of a hand, at, over, or along anything.
  • n. A single passage of a tool over something, or of something over a tool.
  • n. An attempt.
  • n. (fencing) A thrust or push; an attempt to stab or strike an adversary.
  • n. (figuratively) A thrust; a sally of wit.
  • n. A sexual advance.
  • n. (sports) The act of moving the ball or puck from one player to another.
  • n. (rail transport) A passing of two trains in the same direction on a single track, when one is put into…
  • n. Permission or license to pass, or to go and come.
  • n. A document granting permission to pass or to go and come; a passport; a ticket permitting free transit…
  • n. (baseball) An intentional walk.
  • n. The state of things; condition; predicament; impasse.
  • n. (obsolete) Estimation; character.
  • n. (obsolete, Chaucer) A part, a division. Compare passus.
  • n. (cooking) The area in a restaurant kitchen where the finished dishes are passed from the chefs to the…
  • n. An act of declining to play one's turn in a game, often by saying the word "pass".
  • n. (computing) A run through a document as part of a translation, compilation or reformatting process.
  • n. (computing, slang) A password (especially one for a restricted-access website).

pot

  • n. A flat-bottomed vessel (usually metal) used for cooking food.
  • n. Various similar open-topped vessels, particularly.
  • n. (slang) Ruin or deterioration.
  • n. (historical) An iron hat with a broad brim worn as a helmet.
  • n. (rail transport) A pot-shaped non-conducting (usually ceramic) stand that supports an electrified rail…
  • n. (gambling) The money available to be won in a hand of poker or a round of other games of chance; (figuratively)…
  • n. (Britain, horse-racing, slang) A favorite: a heavily-backed horse.
  • n. (sports) The act of causing a ball to fall into a pocket in cue sports such as billiards.
  • n. (slang) Clipping of potbelly: a pot-shaped belly, a paunch.
  • n. (slang) Clipping of potshot: a haphazard shot; an easy or cheap shot.
  • n. (chiefly East Midlands, Yorkshire) A plaster cast.
  • n. (historical) Alternative form of pott: a former size of paper, 12.5 × 15 inches.
  • v. To put (something) into a pot.
  • v. To preserve by bottling or canning.
  • v. (cue sports) To cause a ball to fall into a pocket.
  • v. (cue sports) To be capable of being potted.
  • v. (transitive) To shoot with a firearm.
  • v. (intransitive, dated) To take a pot shot, or haphazard shot, with a firearm.
  • v. (transitive, colloquial) To secure; gain; win; bag.
  • v. (Britain) To send someone to gaol, expeditiously.
  • v. (obsolete, dialect, Britain) To tipple; to drink.
  • v. (transitive) To drain.
  • v. (transitive, Britain) To seat a person, usually a young child, onto a potty or toilet, typically during…
  • v. (chiefly East Midlands) To apply a plaster cast to a broken limb.
  • n. (slang, uncountable) Marijuana.
  • n. (slang, electronics) A simple electromechanical device used to control resistance or voltage (often to…
  • n. (role-playing games) Clipping of potion.

potty

  • n. (diminutive) A chamber pot, particularly (children) the pot used when toilet-training children.
  • n. (diminutive) Any other device or place for urination or defecation: a toilet; a lavatory; a latrine; an…
  • v. (intransitive, childish) Variant of go potty.
  • adj. (informal) Insane.
  • adj. (golf) Easy to pot the ball on.

produce

  • v. (transitive) To yield, make or manufacture; to generate.
  • v. (transitive) To make (a thing) available to a person, an authority, etc.; to provide for inspection.
  • v. (transitive, media) To sponsor and present (a motion picture, etc) to an audience or to the public.
  • v. (mathematics) To extend an area, or lengthen a line.
  • v. (obsolete) To draw out; to extend; to lengthen or prolong.
  • n. Items produced.
  • n. Amount produced.
  • n. Harvested agricultural goods collectively, especially vegetables and fruit, but possibly including eggs,…
  • n. Offspring.
  • n. (Australia) Livestock and pet food supplies.

react

  • v. (transitive) To act or perform a second time; to do over again; to reenact.
  • v. (physics) To return an impulse or impression; to resist the action of another body by an opposite force.
  • v. (chemistry, intransitive) To act upon each other; to exercise a reciprocal or a reverse effect, as two…
  • v. (chemistry, transitive) To cause chemical agents to react; to cause one chemical agent to react with another.

respond

  • v. (transitive, intransitive) To say something in return; to answer; to reply.
  • v. (intransitive) To act in return; to exhibit some action or effect in return to a force or stimulus; to…
  • v. (transitive, intransitive) To correspond with; to suit.
  • v. (transitive) To satisfy; to answer.
  • n. A response.
  • n. A versicle or short anthem chanted at intervals during the reading of a lection.
  • n. (architecture) A half-pillar, pilaster, or any corresponding device engaged in a wall to receive the impost…

seat

  • n. Something to be sat upon.
  • n. A location or site.
  • n. The starting point of a fire.
  • n. Posture, or way of sitting, on horseback.
  • v. (transitive) To put an object into a place where it will rest; to fix; to set firm.
  • v. (transitive) To provide with places to sit.
  • v. (transitive) To request or direct one or more persons to sit.
  • v. (transitive, legislature) To recognize the standing of a person or persons by providing them with one…
  • v. (transitive) To assign the seats of.
  • v. (transitive) To cause to occupy a post, site, or situation; to station; to establish; to fix; to settle.
  • v. (obsolete, intransitive) To rest; to lie down.
  • v. To settle; to plant with inhabitants.
  • v. To put a seat or bottom in.

shit

  • n. (countable, uncountable, colloquial, vulgar) Solid excretory product evacuated from the bowels; feces.
  • n. (countable, colloquial, vulgar, in the plural, definite) (the shits) diarrhea.
  • n. (countable, colloquial, vulgar) An instance of defecation.
  • n. (uncountable, vulgar, colloquial) Rubbish; worthless matter.
  • n. (uncountable, vulgar, colloquial) Stuff, things.
  • n. (uncountable, colloquial, vulgar, definite) (the shit) The best of its kind.
  • n. (uncountable, vulgar, colloquial) Nonsense; bullshit.
  • n. (countable, vulgar, colloquial) A nasty, despicable person, used particularly of men.
  • n. (uncountable, vulgar, colloquial) (in negations) Anything.
  • n. (uncountable, vulgar, colloquial) A problem or difficult situation.
  • n. (uncountable, vulgar, colloquial) A strong rebuke.
  • n. (uncountable, vulgar, colloquial) any recreational drug, usually cannabis.
  • adj. (vulgar, colloquial) Of poor quality; worthless.
  • adj. (vulgar, colloquial) Nasty; despicable.
  • adv. (vulgar, colloquial, sometimes by extension) Resembling the color of feces.
  • v. (intransitive, vulgar, colloquial) To defecate.
  • v. (transitive, vulgar, colloquial) To excrete (something) through the anus.
  • v. (transitive, vulgar, colloquial) To fool or try to fool someone; to be deceitful.
  • v. (transitive, vulgar, colloquial, Australia) To annoy.
  • interj. (vulgar) Expression of worry, failure, shock, etc., often at something seen for the first time or remembered…
  • interj. (vulgar) To show displeasure or surprise.

stump

  • n. The remains of something that has been cut off; especially the remains of a tree, the remains of a limb.
  • n. (politics) The place or occasion at which a campaign takes place; the husting.
  • n. (figuratively) A place or occasion at which a person harangues or otherwise addresses a group in a manner…
  • n. (cricket) One of three small wooden posts which together with the bails make the wicket and that the fielding…
  • n. (drawing) An artists’ drawing tool made of rolled paper used to smudge or blend marks made with charcoal,…
  • n. A wooden or concrete pole used to support a house.
  • n. (slang, humorous) A leg.
  • n. A pin in a tumbler lock which forms an obstruction to throwing the bolt except when the gates of the tumblers…
  • n. A pin or projection in a lock to form a guide for a movable piece.
  • v. (transitive) to stop, confuse, or puzzle.
  • v. (intransitive) to baffle; to be unable to find an answer to a question or problem.
  • v. (intransitive) to campaign.
  • v. (transitive, US, colloquial) to travel over (a state, a district, etc.) giving speeches for electioneering…
  • v. (transitive, cricket, of a wicket keeper) to get a batsman out stumped.
  • v. (transitive, cricket) to bowl down the stumps of (a wicket).
  • v. (intransitive) to walk heavily or clumsily, plod, trudge.

tempt

  • v. (transitive) To provoke someone to do wrong, especially by promising a reward; to entice.
  • v. (transitive) To attract; to allure.
  • v. (transitive) To provoke something; to court.

throne

  • n. An impressive seat used by a monarch, often on a raised dais in a throne room and reserved for formal…
  • n. (humorous) Other seats, particularly.
  • n. (figuratively) Leadership, particularly the position of a monarch.
  • n. (Christianity) An order of angels ranked above dominions and below cherubim.
  • v. (transitive, archaic) To place on a royal seat; to enthrone.
  • v. (transitive, archaic) To place in an elevated position; to give sovereignty or dominion to; to exalt.
  • v. (intransitive, archaic) To be in, or sit upon, a throne; to be placed as if upon a throne.

tiller

  • n. A person who tills; a farmer.
  • n. A machine that mechanically tills the soil.
  • n. (obsolete) A young tree.
  • n. A shoot of a plant which springs from the root or bottom of the original stalk; a sapling; a sucker.
  • v. (intransitive) To produce new shoots from the root or from around the bottom of the original stalk; stool.
  • n. (archery) The stock; a beam on a crossbow carved to fit the arrow, or the point of balance in a longbow.
  • n. (nautical) A bar of iron or wood connected with the rudderhead and leadline, usually forward, in which…
  • n. (nautical) The handle of the rudder which the helmsman holds to steer the boat, a piece of wood or metal…
  • n. A handle; a stalk.
  • n. (Britain, dialect, obsolete) A small drawer; a till.

toilet

  • n. (archaic) Personal grooming, in other words washing, dressing, etc.
  • n. (now rare) One's style of dressing: dress, outfit.
  • n. (archaic) A dressing room.
  • n. A room or enclosed area containing a toilet: a bathroom or water closet.
  • n. (New Zealand) A small secondary lavatory having a toilet and sink but no bathtub or shower.
  • n. (obsolete) A chamber pot.
  • n. A fixture used for urination and defecation, particularly those with a large bowl and ring-shaped seat…
  • n. (figuratively) A very shabby or dirty place.
  • n. (obsolete) A covering of linen, silk, or tapestry, spread over a table in a chamber or dressing room.
  • n. (obsolete) A dressing table.
  • v. (dated) To dress and groom oneself.
  • v. To use the toilet.
  • v. To assist another (a child etc.) in using the toilet.

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