茅坑

máokēng
noun #32,249

Meanings

  1. 1 latrine pit
  2. 2 outhouse hole
  3. 3 pit toilet (especially in rural areas)

Examples

Cūnzi lǐ yǐqián dōu yòng máokēng.
Villages used to all have pit latrines.
Zhàn zhe máokēng bù lā shǐ.
Hogging the latrine without doing your business. (idiom: a dog in the manger — taking a position without doing the job)

Tips

culture
茅坑 originally meant a pit toilet inside a thatched () shed — common in pre-modern villages. The set phrase 茅坑拉屎 ('hogging the latrine without crapping') is one of the most-used Chinese sayings for someone who occupies a role/position without doing the work — equivalent to the English 'dog in the manger'.
register
Crude / rural register. For modern toilets use 厕所 (cèsuǒ) or 卫生间 (wèishēngjiān). 茅坑 today is mostly used in the idiom above or in nostalgic/rural references.

Stroke Order

máo
kēng