Art A
puer mingens is a figure in a work of art depicted as a prepubescent boy in the act of urinating, either actual or simulated. The puer mingens could represent anything from whimsy and boyish innocence to erotic symbols of virility and masculine bravado.
Toilet training Babies have little socialized control over urination within traditions or families that do not practice
elimination communication and instead use
diapers.
Toilet training is the process of learning to restrict urination to socially approved times and situations. Consequently, young children sometimes develop
nocturnal enuresis.
Facilities It is socially more accepted and more environmentally hygienic for those who are able, especially when indoors and in outdoor urban or suburban areas, to urinate in a
toilet. Public toilets may have
urinals, usually for males, although
female urinals exist, designed to be used in various ways.
Urination without facilities at
Yue Fei's
tomb in
Hangzhou,
China. It was formerly common for visitors to
spit, urinate, or
defecate on the statues as a continuing denunciation of their supposed role in Yue's 1142 murder. ,
Brazil, warning that public urination is illegal Acceptability of outdoor urination in a public place other than at a
public urinal varies with the situation and with customs. Potential disadvantages include a dislike of the smell of urine, and exposure of genitals. It can be avoided or mitigated by going to a quiet place and/or facing a tree or wall if urinating standing up, or while squatting, hiding the back behind walls, bushes, or a tree.
Portable toilets (port-a-potties) are frequently placed in outdoor situations where no immediate facility is available. These need to be serviced (cleaned out) on a regular basis. Urination in a heavily wooded area is generally harmless, actually saves water, and may be condoned for males (and less commonly, females) in certain situations as long as common sense is used. Examples (depending on circumstances) include activities such as camping, hiking, delivery driving, cross country running, rural fishing, amateur baseball, golf, etc. The more developed and crowded a place is, the more public urination tends to be objectionable. In the countryside, it is more acceptable than in a street in a town, where it may be a common transgression. Often this is done after the consumption of
alcoholic beverages, which causes production of additional urine as well as a reduction of
inhibitions. One proposed way to inhibit public urination due to drunkenness is the
Urilift, which is disguised as a normal manhole by day but raises out of the ground at night to provide a public restroom for bar-goers. In many places, public urination is punishable by fines, though attitudes vary widely by country. In general, females are less likely to urinate in public than males. Women and girls, unlike men and boys, are restricted in where they can urinate conveniently and discreetly. The 5th-century BC historian
Herodotus, writing on the culture of the
ancient Persians and highlighting the differences with those of the
Greeks, noted that to urinate in the presence of others was prohibited among Persians. There was a popular belief in the UK, that it was legal for a man to urinate in public so long as it occurred on the rear wheel of his vehicle and he had his right hand on the vehicle, but this is not true. Public urination still remains more accepted by males in the UK, although British cultural tradition itself seems to find such practices objectionable. In
Islamic toilet etiquette, it is
haram to urinate while facing the
Qibla, or to turn one's back to it when urinating or relieving bowels, but modesty requirements for females make it impossible for girls to relieve themselves without facilities. When toilets are unavailable, females can relieve themselves in
Laos,
Russia and
Mongolia in emergency, but it remains less accepted for females in
India even when circumstances make this a highly desirable option. Women generally need to urinate more frequently than men; this can be due to having a smaller functional bladder capacity. Resisting the urge to urinate because of lack of facilities can promote
urinary tract infections which can lead to more serious infections and, in rare situations, can cause
renal damage in women.
Female urination devices are available to help women to urinate discreetly, as well to help them urinate while standing.
Talking about urination In many societies and in many social classes, even mentioning the need to urinate is seen as a social transgression, despite it being a universal need. Many adults avoid stating that they need to urinate. Many expressions exist, some
euphemistic and some vulgar. For example, centuries ago the standard English word (both noun and verb, for the product and the activity) was "
piss", but subsequently "pee", formerly associated with children, has become more common in general public speech. Since elimination of bodily wastes is, of necessity, a subject talked about with toddlers during
toilet training, other expressions considered suitable for use by and with children exist, and some continue to be used by adults, e.g. "weeing", "doing/having a wee-wee", "to tinkle", "
go potty", "go pee pee". Other expressions include "squirting" and "taking a leak", and, predominantly by younger persons for outdoor female urination, "popping a squat", referring to the position many women adopt in such circumstances. National
varieties of English show creativity.
American English uses "to whiz".
Australian English has coined "I am off to take a
Chinese singing lesson", derived from the tinkling sound of urination against the China porcelain of a toilet bowl.
British English uses "going to see my aunt", "going to
see a man about a dog", "to piddle", "to splash (one's) boots", as well as "to have a slash", which originates from the
Scottish term for a large splash of liquid. One of the most common, albeit old-fashioned, euphemisms in British English is "to spend a penny", a reference to coin-operated
pay toilets, which used (
pre-decimalisation) to charge that sum.
Use in language References to urination are commonly used in
slang. Usage in English includes: •
Piss (someone) off (to anger someone; alternatively, to leave somewhere in a hurry) •
Piss off! (to express contempt; see above) •
Pissing down (to refer to heavy rain) •
Pissing contest (an unproductive ego-driven battle) •
Pisshead (vulgar way to refer to someone who drinks too much
alcohol) •
Piss ant (a worthless person; in non-slang usage the term refers to several species of ant whose colonies have a urine-like odor) •
Pissing up a flagpole (to partake in a futile activity) •
Pissing into the wind (to act in ways that cause self-harm) •
Piss away (to squander or use wastefully) •
Taking the piss (to take liberties, be unreasonable, or to mock another person) •
Full of piss and vinegar (energetic or ambitious late adolescent or young adult male) •
Piss up (British expression for drinking to get drunk) •
Pissed (drunk in British English or angry in American English)
Urination and sexual activity In humans from chemical signals in the female's urine
Urolagnia is a
paraphilia related to the act, sight, or smell of urine or urination. Urine may be consumed, or the person may bathe in it; this is known colloquially as a
golden shower. Involuntary urination during sexual intercourse is common, but rarely acknowledged. In one survey, 24% of women reported involuntary urination during sexual intercourse; in 66% of patients urination occurred on
penetration, while in 33% urine leakage was restricted to orgasm.
In other animals Female
kob may exhibit urolagnia during sex; one female will
urinate while the other sticks her nose in the stream. Some mammals
urinate on themselves in order to attract mates during the
rut or urinate on other individuals before mating with them. A male
Patagonian mara, a type of rodent, will stand on his hind legs and urinate on a female's rump, to which the female may respond by spraying a jet of urine backwards into the face of the male. The male's urination is meant to repel other males from his partner while the female's urination is a rejection of any approaching male when she is not receptive. A male porcupine urinates on a female porcupine prior to mating, spraying the urine at high velocity. == Electric shock injuries and deaths ==