Bathroom
in sentence
269 examples of Bathroom in a sentence
Now, when you want to use the LFC indoors, all you have to do is pull the levers out of the drivetrain, stow them in the frame, and it converts into a normal wheelchair that you can use just like any other normal wheelchair, and we sized it like a normal wheelchair, so it's narrow enough to fit through a standard doorway, it's low enough to fit under a table, and it's small and maneuverable enough to fit in a
bathroom
and this is important so the user can get up close to a toilet, and be able to transfer off just like he could in a normal wheelchair.
They never went to the
bathroom.
When I would go to the bathroom, I would turn my shoes around in the stalls so that it looked like I was peeing standing up.
A few years ago, oddly enough, I needed the bathroom, and I found one, a public bathroom, and I went into the stall, and I prepared to do what I'd done most of my life: use the toilet, flush the toilet, forget about the toilet.
So when I get despondent about the state of sanitation, even though these are pretty exciting times because we've got the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation reinventing the toilet, which is great, we've got Matt Damon going on
bathroom
strike, which is great for humanity, very bad for his colon.
Like, I remember one day I found my dad convulsing, foaming at the mouth, OD-ing on the
bathroom
floor.
We stand in a massively lit bathroom, looking into the mirror cleaning our teeth.
So we're nearing the end of our conversation and the end of dinner, and I've decided Steve the I.T. guy and I are really just not meant for each other, but we'll part ways as friends, when he gets up to go to the bathroom, and in the meantime, the bill comes to our table.
So every time you pulled on a t-shirt, or switched the light on, or went to the bathroom, or sometimes all three together, you were reminded sustainability was about compromise.
So one day I stayed a little late after school, a little too late, and I lurked in the girls
' bathroom.
So instead what you do is you have them watch videos and do interactive exercises in the comfort of their dorm rooms, in their bedroom, in the dining room, in the bathroom, wherever they're most creative.
According to the American Time Use Survey, mothers still do twice as much childcare as fathers, which is better than it was in Erma Bombeck's day, but I still think that something she wrote is highly relevant: "I have not been alone in the
bathroom
since October."
We wanted a
bathroom.
The National Park Service built the
bathroom.
We’ve looked at this place and there's only one place to sleep, there's only one place to eat, there's only one bathroom, there's only one water fountain.
I think I must have got up to go to the
bathroom.
They put passwords on their email and their social media accounts, they put locks on their bedroom and
bathroom
doors, all steps designed to prevent other people from entering what they consider their private realm and knowing what it is that they don't want other people to know.
We went to the
bathroom
to wash our hands.
Around the corner from my bedroom was the
bathroom
that I used to share with my sister.
And in between my bedroom and the
bathroom
was a balcony that overlooked the family room.
And that's where everyone would hang out and watch TV, so that every time that I walked from my bedroom to the bathroom, everyone would see me, and every time I took a shower and would come back in a towel, everyone would see me.
Buildings don't just reflect our society, they shape our society down to the smallest spaces: the local libraries, the homes where we raise our children, and the walk that they take from the bedroom to the
bathroom.
When I was six years old, an elderly family friend fell down in the
bathroom
and suffered severe injuries.
I became concerned about my own grandparents and decided to invent a smart
bathroom
system.
Motion sensors would be installed inside the tiles of
bathroom
floors to detect the falls of elderly patients whenever they fell down in the
bathroom.
One of my students, who has now become an instructor, when he lost his vision, after a few months he was sitting in his three story house and he realized that he could hear everything going on throughout the house: conversations, people in the kitchen, people in the bathroom, several floors away, several walls away.
I remember the thick, straight hair, and how it would come around me like a curtain when she bent to pick me up; her soft, southern Thai accent; the way I would cling to her, even if she just wanted to go to the
bathroom
or get something to eat.
And I'm standing in my
bathroom
getting ready to step into the shower, and I could actually hear the dialogue inside of my body.
And when somebody gets up, in fact, to go answer a phone or use a
bathroom
or something, the empty seat becomes, if you will, that person.
An African American woman gets up an hour earlier to go to work, straightens her hair in the bathroom, goes to the
bathroom
probably four, five, six times a day to keep straightening her hair, to keep making sure she fits in.
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