Chlouvānem/Lexicon: Difference between revisions

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** ''muñcis'' — hose used for cleaning the anal area after defecation
** ''muñcis'' — hose used for cleaning the anal area after defecation
** ''lišubūm'' — toilet paper
** ''lišubūm'' — toilet paper
** The norm in the Chlouvānem Inquisition is cleaning using water, which also encouraged for environmental reasons, either exclusively or in addition to toilet paper. Nowadays nearly every flat and home in the Inquisition has its own toilet and bathroom, with the exception of some very old unrenovated agrarian courts, dormitories, and ''ulañšāme''. Dormitories, ''ulañšāme'', and accomodation in summer resort camps have a set of shared hygienical facilities on each floor or on every second floor. Public toilets (either free-standing or in public buildings) aren’t gender-segregated and are all located in separate cubicles; typically, in every toilet complex, around two thirds of available ones are squat toilets, while the others are seat toilets (though in smaller places with a limited amount of toilets only squat ones are usually found). Flush toilets are the norm, except for the desert areas and parts of Kēhamijāṇa, but in virtually every urban area of the Inquisition water economy laws require flushing systems to be buttons that only allow water to flush as long as they’re being pressed.
** The norm in the Chlouvānem Inquisition is cleaning using water, which also encouraged for environmental reasons, either exclusively or in addition to toilet paper. Nowadays nearly every flat and home in the Inquisition has its own toilet and bathroom, with the exception of some very old unrenovated agrarian courts, dormitories, and ''ulañšāme''. Dormitories, ''ulañšāme'', and accomodation in summer resort camps have a set of shared hygienical facilities on each floor or on every second floor. Public toilets (either free-standing or in public buildings) aren’t gender-segregated and are all located in separate cubicles; typically, in every toilet complex, around two thirds of available ones are squat toilets, while the others are seat toilets (though in smaller places with a limited amount of toilets only squat ones are usually found). Flush toilets are the norm, except for the desert areas and parts of Pūrjijāṇa, but in virtually every urban area of the Inquisition water economy laws require flushing systems to be buttons that only allow water to flush as long as they’re being pressed.
* ''nurmai'' — soap
* ''nurmai'' — soap
** Black soap made from ashes has been in extremely common use among Chlouvānem since antiquity. In fact, the word ''nurmai'' used for soap is a Proto-Lahob derivation from the root for "ash" (cf. ''narmis'' "ash(es)").
** Black soap made from ashes has been in extremely common use among Chlouvānem since antiquity. In fact, the word ''nurmai'' used for soap is a Proto-Lahob derivation from the root for "ash" (cf. ''narmis'' "ash(es)").
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