void+excrement
11Defecate — Def e*cate, v. i. 1. To become clear, pure, or free. Goldsmith. [1913 Webster] 2. To void excrement. [1913 Webster] …
12Dung — Dung, v. i. To void excrement. Swift. [1913 Webster] …
13Excrementize — Ex cre*ment*ize v. i. To void excrement. [R.] Life of A. Wood ?. [1913 Webster] …
14Scumber — Scum ber, v. i. [Cf. {Discumber}.] To void excrement. [Obs. or Prov. Eng.] Massinger. [1913 Webster] …
15defecate — defecation, n. /def i kayt /, v., defecated, defecating. v.i. 1. to void excrement from the bowels through the anus; have a bowel movement. 2. to become clear of dregs, impurities, etc. v.t. 3. to clear of dregs, impurities, etc.; purify; refine …
16scumber — 1. noun dung 2. verb to void excrement …
17cucking stool — early 13c., from cuck to void excrement, from O.N. kuka feces (the chair was sometimes in the form of a close stool). Also known as trebucket and castigatory, it was used on disorderly women and fraudulent tradesmen, either in the form of public… …
18dirt — 15c. metathesis of M.E. drit, drytt mud, dirt, dung (c.1300), from O.N. drit, cognate with O.E. dritan to void excrement, from P.Gmc. *dritanan (Cf. Du. drijten, O.H.G. trizan). Used abusively of persons from c.1300. Meaning gossip first attested …
19defecate — I. v. a. Clarify, clear, purify, refine, purge of extraneous matter. II. v. n. 1. Clear, clarify, become pure, cleanse itself. 2. Go to stool, ease one s self, evacuate the bowels, void excrement …
20defecate — v 1. void excrement, excrete, egest, Physiol. evacuate; have a bowel movement or B.M.; All Euph. go potty, relieve oneself, do number 2; move, pass, empty. 2. purify, clarify, refine, cleanse, depurate, purge …