Why is there only one bathroom in Japan, and two in China are not needed?

Updated on Bathroom 2024-08-22
2 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    Who said that Chinese families have two toilets, you must first figure out that Chinese families, generally only one, unless it is a rich family, there will be several, and Chinese families have a large population, housing prices are expensive, several generations of the same house squeezed into a room is a common thing, and often the toilet and shower room are put together, and often have to wash towels in it, wash clothes or something, naturally it takes up a lot of time.

  2. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    Japanese toilets have been separated from wet and dry.

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Gongzhiwen, corrected, there is a follow-up in the primary school Chinese textbook, and the boss's professional vision saw that he was not expelled 6 times, and the school also had to expel him. There is no such strange thing in Japan, and the demanding people go directly to the dishwasher.

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Habit issues. Besides, it's only for your own family. Where can it be dirty, people have their own cleaning.

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You have to find a master to do it.

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I don't know about this yet... It's simple. It is the principle of order of the young and the old. Plus there are some regulations. Wake up early may not be able to use the right... Just look at Japanese TV dramas.

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There is no shortcut that can be solved by yourself, so you can only discuss with your downstairs neighbors to increase the number of openings and change the pipes to solve the problem.