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单词 lodge
释义

Definition of lodge in English:

lodge

noun lɒdʒlɑdʒ
  • 1A small house at the gates of a park or in the grounds of a large house, occupied by a gatekeeper, gardener, or other employee.

    (公园门口的)门房;(大房子院内看门人、园丁或其他雇工居住的)侧屋

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The key to the gate lodge's appeal is the individuality of each building.
    • During this period, Corona planted a new arboretum and created the bog garden and a walk was completed from the lodge to the house.
    • These include Blackrock Castle in Cork - not so long ago its gate lodge was used as a public house.
    • The gate lodge behind it is the only indicator that behind the wall lies some large estate, somewhere that is hidden from view and inaccessible to the public.
    • The gate lodge is to be turned into accommodation for the full-time caretaker who will look after the site.
    • The estate also contains lodges, coach houses and a walled garden.
    • In the gate lodge, there is a living room, kitchen, bedroom and shower room.
    • He rang at the gate and looked through its ironwork at the house until an elderly man came out of the gate lodge and opened a small wooden door in the wall.
    • The gate lodge has another 92 square metres of space.
    • In Castlecore, the gate lodge retains many original features and carries a price tag of £140,000.
    • The house, the entrance lodge and garden of just over an acre comprise lot one.
    • As a child Mr Gawthorpe would often visit the park lodge where his uncle lived with his family, there to be plied with elderberry cordial in the summer.
    • The Westward Group, the developer, is hoping to complete the two gate lodges and a three-bedroom house in the first phase in the coming months.
    • It was agreed that Gloria would stay for three weeks and would occupy the lodge in the garden of the Wood's house some 30 yards away.
    • Landenstown Estate, a two-storey property, has four reception rooms, two gate lodges and an extensive stable complex.
    • There is only one lodge in this park, just one.
    • It stood in its own park, with a lodge and a drive, partly to give privacy, partly to impress or even overawe visitors.
    • The existing protected gate lodge will be altered and renovated for residential use.
    • Mulvany could also build in a light and whimsical manner, especially when it came to gate lodges.
    • We came suddenly to the gate of the lodge and Locksley the caretaker greeted us diffidently in his knit hat and muddy Wellingtons.
    Synonyms
    gatehouse, cottage, toll house
    1. 1.1 A small country house occupied in season for sports such as hunting, shooting, or skiing.
      (狩猎、射击、钓鱼、滑雪时节供人用的)乡间小屋
      a hunting lodge

      狩猎小屋。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • "Here we are, " Katie said, pulling up in front of the main ski lodge.
      • Our tour operator drove 1,000 kilometres to meet us with a replacement guide, and we resumed our interrupted itinerary of dunes, game lodges and safari parks.
      • For example, if you run a ski lodge, you could create a blog about the local skill hill.
      • Originally built in 1703 as a hunting lodge, it doubled as a soup kitchen during the Great Hunger.
      • Only fragments remain of this royal hunting lodge, although there are some impressive earthworks including Bank Slack.
      • An itinerant court stayed at urban and rural palaces and hunting lodges.
      • If this place is a standard fishing lodge then I'll eat my hat.
      • All in all, it resembles the exclusive hunting lodge of some pompous lord and his friends.
      • An upscale lakeside lodge welcomes anglers, and stables are nearby.
      • The hunting lodge was, indeed, ancient.
      • The largest wooden structure in the islands, it's modeled after old English hunting lodges, with a full croquet course and pros to teach you the game.
      • It has also been home to an admiral, a church minister and a teacher as well as being a hunting lodge.
      • In fact, if you stay in town and want to book a game drive, there are 43 hunting lodges in the area.
      • The mansion looked more like a hunting lodge than the center for coordinating five million personnel.
      • She has not had the easiest person to live with, and for most of our married life our house has looked much more like a hunting lodge than a home.
      • A few seconds later, the main ski lodge sped into view.
      • I motored away to the fishing lodge and reported this cheat to the fishery manager.
      • Hunters may return to the lodge for lunch and siesta or make a day of it in the field.
      • The king spent increasing amounts of time at his hunting lodge at Versailles, and by the late 1660s it was being regularly extended to accommodate his growing entourage.
      • The men's dorms are decorated in virile earth tones and the rugged wood and tweedy furniture gives you the feeling of being in a hunting lodge.
      Synonyms
      house, cottage, cabin, chalet
      British shooting box
    2. 1.2in names A large house or hotel.
      用于名字中宅,舍,旅馆
      Cumberland Lodge

      坎伯兰宅。

    3. 1.3 A porter's quarters at the main entrance of a college or other large building.
      (大学及其他大建筑门口的)门房
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Do the ducks still nest next to the porter's lodge near Staircase 1?
      • In college Cook then spotted a small poster in the porter's lodge.
      • The film, of which there is only one existing copy in the UK, has now arrived and is being stored in padlocked cans in the College lodge, and is due to be screened next week.
      • This building was the main part of the lodge and flanking it were two dorms, which would house the girls and the boys separately.
    4. 1.4 The residence of a head of a college, especially at Cambridge.
      (剑桥的)学院院长住宅
      he dined at the Master's Lodge
    5. 1.5 A North American Indian tent or wigwam.
      印第安锥形棚屋
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Sweat lodges are traditionally low, windowless, insulated domes constructed of willow branches.
    6. 1.6 A beaver's den.
      海狸窝
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Beaver lodges are also the work of a master builder.
      • One species is commonly found in beaver lodges!
      • Visitors will be fascinated to see the lodges and dams that beavers build and, given the chance, will be delighted to watch these entertaining and intelligent animals.
      • Like beavers, muskrats build lodges out of sticks, twigs, cattails and bulrushes, reinforcing them with mud.
      • In the pond were two beaver lodges and along the shore there were many examples of beaver-gnawed trees.
      • In the next scene, he builds an airy dome, something like a beaver lodge, out of bleached driftwood.
      Synonyms
      den, lair, hole, sett
      retreat, haunt, shelter
  • 2A branch or meeting place of an organization such as the Freemasons.

    (共济会等的)支部,会议室

    in names the foundation of the Grand Lodge of England
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Towns were also cultural centres, the largest of which, by the second half of the eighteenth century, possessed theatres, masonic lodges, reading clubs, and newspapers.
    • They had usually been long connected by business interests and had also engaged in social intercourse through associations such as Masonic lodges.
    • Historians have investigated union halls, fraternal lodges, and doomed third parties for insight into how the American working class has managed the dilemma of poverty in a land of plenty.
    • He then moved to Helena where he entered the insurance business and became an American citizen as well as a member of the Montana Club and a Masonic lodge.
    • Scholars have placed women's participation in associations such as Masonic lodges and salons under an ever-increasing scrutiny.
    • Other than that, if you believe in helping others, enjoy ritual bonding and can find someone to introduce you to a lodge, Freemasonry might be just the thing.
    • Losing faith in the customary avenues for change, they began to seek new outlets for their aspirations in Masonic lodges, provincial academies, and political clubs.
    • Masonic lodges set up charitable funds, and in several cities philanthropic societies were established in the 1780s to tap the wealth of the rich for the poor.
    • The huge works are the membership registers of the 600 Freemason's lodges of Scotland, the ‘secret’ order reputed to wield legendary influence in the corridors of power.
    • He also made silver for churches, Masonic lodges, and mechanics' associations.
    • He felt he was being punished for exposing the links between the business world, the Mafia, the secret Masonic lodges and the secret services.
    • The Freemasons had dissolved their lodges under government pressure, and state employees in all professions were subject to dismissal for left-wing associations.
    • The origins of the Freemasons are disputed, but the first organized lodges date from 1717 in England.
    • Between 800 and 900 Masonic lodges were founded in France between 1732 and 1793, two-thirds of them after 1760.
    • By the 1720s they had their own church with the establishment of the first Masonic lodges.
    • This is still a working lodge, but it also contains a museum of Freemasonry, which, as you'd expect, houses a few Burns items.
    • What set the clubs apart from masonic lodges and circles, however, was their involvement in politics.
    • The scheme will be considered by representatives of lodges and other Masonic organisations who use the existing hall at a special meeting in November.
    • Some of their public meetings and conventions were recorded, but I have been unable to locate minutes from any secret meetings of individual lodges.
    • Returned to St Petersburg, they transformed the lodges into secret societies and plotted to bring constitutional rule to an autocratic, caste-ridden, and militaristic state.
    Synonyms
    section, branch, chapter, wing
    association, society, group, club, union, guild, fraternity, brotherhood, sorority, alliance, coterie, league
    rare sodality
verb lɒdʒlɑdʒ
  • 1with object Present (a complaint, appeal, claim, etc.) formally to the proper authorities.

    (向有关当局)正式提出(申诉,上诉,索赔)

    he has 28 days in which to lodge an appeal

    他可以在28天内提出上诉。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • A full planning application is to be lodged with the council in April.
    • The following day government prosecutors lodged a formal appeal against the ruling.
    • It is not the function of this Tribunal to comment on whether the unfair dismissal claim lodged by the Appellant was justified or not as the matter was settled.
    • Jason's claim will be lodged with the courts following his 21st birthday in June.
    • In my judgment, it cannot be said that the present application was lodged promptly.
    • He has now lodged a complaint with a hospital which sent her home.
    • Obviously, once the game is over teams can still lodge formal protests or complaints as they do now.
    • Three separate planning applications have been lodged with the local authority for the project.
    • Four individuals have now lodged complaints against the dentist, the health board has confirmed.
    • It seems that the Appellant did not lodge a timely appeal against conviction.
    • Magistrates granted the two men conditional bail, but Gair immediately lodged an appeal against the decision.
    • They have also lodged a claim for damages, aggravated damages and costs.
    • This matter would be considered when the application was formally lodged to the Local Authority.
    • The appeal was lodged with the council before Christmas, just as the six-month deadline for appeals was reached.
    • They cannot leave it to the initiative of the next of kin either to lodge a formal complaint or to take responsibility for the conduct of the investigative procedures.
    • In excess of 70,000 Claimants have lodged claims and further claims are anticipated.
    • The unfair dismissal claims were immediately lodged by the Union and hearings began in March 1999.
    • Complaints are lodged by the claimant victim or, if this is not possible, by relatives or representatives.
    • In 1997, a claim was lodged on behalf of 5,000 other clerical employees, all of them women.
    Synonyms
    submit, register, enter, put forward, place, advance, lay, present, press, bring, prefer, tender, proffer, put on record, record, table, file
    1. 1.1lodge something in/with Leave money or a valuable item in (a place) or with (someone) for safekeeping.
      存放,寄存(钱,贵重物品)
      the money is lodged in a bank
      Example sentencesExamples
      • On Wednesday it lodged this sum with the Central Bank to cover repayments.
      • Two of the syndicate members lodged the ticket with the Bank of Ireland on New Year's Eve, but when they went to retrieve it last Friday the bank had to admit it had misplaced the ticket.
      • It's understood Mrs Walsh intended to lodge the money in the bank, but the cash, all in notes, has yet to be recovered.
      • Cllr Durcan said if the CPO was used the council could lodge the money in an account and leave it to the three people involved to sort out the payments.
      • The ensuing arrangement between 1985 and 1988 saw the Prunas and other family members lodge large sums with the bank and get loans in return.
      Synonyms
      deposit, put, bank, entrust, consign
      stash, store, stow, put away, lay in, squirrel away
  • 2with adverbial of place Make or become firmly fixed or embedded in a place.

    (把…)固定于;(使)嵌入

    with object they had to remove a bullet lodged near his spine

    他们要取出钻入他脊柱附近的子弹。

    no object figurative the image had lodged in her mind

    〈喻〉那景象深深地印入了她的脑海。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • It was as though everything I'd experienced lodged itself firmly in my mind and I could think of nothing else.
    • This we find firmly lodged in the mid-region of the chest cavity.
    • The new research hints that particles can become more permanently lodged in the brain.
    • True to form, the arrow was lodged deep in the center of the target.
    • A gripping feeling lodged firmly in my chest.
    • The bullet lodged near his pelvis and cannot be safely removed.
    • Is he strong enough to endure the pain of a bullet lodged somewhere in his body?
    • His poetry is great, firmly and rightly lodged in its place in literature.
    • I would, however, give the first place to rhyme, as a device which lodges a message firmly in some crevice of the mind.
    • You should not be alarmed when it lodges in your brain and won't get out.
    • They lodged in the lungs of victims and began to grow into greenish moss.
    • A week ago last Friday is lodged firmly in my mind as the night I arrived home from work to find army, police and council workers busy evacuating my street.
    • He held his breath, stifling the cough that had lodged in his chest.
    • She hit the ground painfully, landing on an elbow and cheek, with the edge of the glass door swinging back to lodge firmly against her hip.
    • The little slivers of glass were, according to the X-ray, still lodged in his throat.
    • In the 1980s and early 1990s, acid rain was at the top of the environmental agenda, with images of dying forests and lakes firmly lodged in the public conscience.
    • On July 12, 1988, Hecht was attending a weekly Republican luncheon when a piece of apple lodged firmly in his throat.
    • She will undergo an operation on Monday to have the bullet, which is lodged near her spine, removed.
    • When Hope and Gabe got home that day, Adele had an idea firmly lodged in her mind.
    • The bullet lodged so near the brain that he suffered atrocious headaches for the next twenty years.
    Synonyms
    become fixed, embed itself, become embedded, become implanted, get/become stuck, stick, catch, wedge, become caught, become settled, anchor itself, become anchored, come to rest, remain
  • 3no object, with adverbial Rent accommodation in another person's house.

    the man who lodged in the room next door

    租住隔壁房间的人。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • If accurate, this means that he had lodged in the house (not necessarily continuously) for at least two years before the marriage.
    • By this stage we had reached the house where I lodged and as we walked in the front door, both carrying a cardboard box, one of the other female lodgers did a double take.
    • Up until the age of 26 I'd been lodging in a single room, sharing a house with people I might rather not have shared with, and feeling generally encroached upon.
    • The composer Handel lodged in the house for three years towards the end of his life while the scientist Henry Cavendish had a room here during his youth.
    • I wanted to know if you would be able to let Kevin lodge at your house.
    • He lodged in a house in High Saint Agnesgate where he wrote mathematical treatise under his own name as well as working on part of Through the Looking Glass.
    • We lodged in two rooms over a bar called The Oranges.
    Synonyms
    reside, board, stay, have lodgings, have rooms, take a room, put up, live, be quartered, stop
    occupy
    North American room
    informal have digs
    formal dwell, be domiciled, sojourn
    archaic abide
    1. 3.1with object and adverbial Provide (someone) with accommodation in return for payment.
      出租房子
      she was lodged in the same hall
      Example sentencesExamples
      • They are lodged at a nice hotel, taken to a premiere, and allowed interviews with the stars.
      • Although bride and groom are lodged in separate institutions, previous clients say this temporary separation does enhance their relationship.
      • His paternal grandfather was lodged in a local asylum and his aunt ran a brothel in Copenhagen.
      • According to jail sources, as many as 11 women prisoners were lodged in this jail.
      • Tompkins is also restoring a century-old estate that will lodge avid tourist birdwatchers.
      • They were also demanding that the people lodged in different jails be released.
      • Nevis came next, and we were lodged again beside the sea, this time in the huge Four Seasons hotel, which has taken over the best beach on the island.
      • The Education Minister of Sudan received the group and we were lodged at the State Guest House.
      • In general, French friends were lodged the on ground floor, Americans on the second, and children and servants of the guests on the third.
      • I was lodged with her when the Russians invaded Czechoslovakia.
      • It was certainly not the purpose of the center to lodge prisoners.
      Synonyms
      accommodate, provide accommodation for, put up, take in, house, board, billet, quarter, shelter, harbour, provide shelter for
      cater for, entertain
  • 4with object (of wind or rain) flatten (a standing crop)

    (风,雨)使(庄稼)倒伏

    no object the variety is high yielding, but it has mostly lodged
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Lodging doubles the rate of decline in digestibility so lodged crops should be harvested as soon as possible.
    • Now factor in such environmental impacts as weather, yield, moisture content, lodged crops, green weeds and ground speed.
    • Soldier harvesters aren't very good at picking up lodged cane.
    • At harvest he noted that about a third of the field was standing well, about a third was heavily lodged and about a third was in between.
    • Some equipment companies have attachments for the combine header to help pick up lodged corn.
    • Good crop residue distribution is even more important in cutting lodged wheat.
    • Richard estimates that combine systems are able to harvest 90 to 95 percent of lodged sugarcane in a field.
    • Where there are heavy and lodged crops on these soils making baled silage might be a better option than using conventional harvesters with modern heavy trailers.

Origin

Middle English loge, via Old French loge 'arbour, hut' from medieval Latin laubia, lobia (see lobby), of Germanic origin; related to German Laube 'arbour'.

  • lobby from mid 16th century:

    Both lobby and lodge (Middle English) go back to medieval Latin lobia ‘covered walk, portico’. The earliest uses of the word refer to monastic cloisters, but after Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries it moved into the world of the rich subjects who turned them into houses. A lobby became an antechamber or entrance hall, and is now often the foyer (see focus) of a hotel. The British Houses of Parliament, and other parliaments, have a central lobby where MPs can meet constituents and members of pressure groups, and two division lobbies where MPs assemble to vote. To lobby meaning ‘to try to influence a legislator’ originated from this arrangement in the USA. Logistics (late 19th century), originally the supplying of troops, developed in French from lodge.

Rhymes

bodge, dodge, Hodge, splodge, stodge, wodge

Definition of lodge in US English:

lodge

nounläjlɑdʒ
  • 1A small house at the gates of a park or in the grounds of a large house, occupied by a gatekeeper, gardener, or other employee.

    (公园门口的)门房;(大房子院内看门人、园丁或其他雇工居住的)侧屋

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The gate lodge behind it is the only indicator that behind the wall lies some large estate, somewhere that is hidden from view and inaccessible to the public.
    • The existing protected gate lodge will be altered and renovated for residential use.
    • The gate lodge has another 92 square metres of space.
    • The Westward Group, the developer, is hoping to complete the two gate lodges and a three-bedroom house in the first phase in the coming months.
    • Mulvany could also build in a light and whimsical manner, especially when it came to gate lodges.
    • We came suddenly to the gate of the lodge and Locksley the caretaker greeted us diffidently in his knit hat and muddy Wellingtons.
    • Landenstown Estate, a two-storey property, has four reception rooms, two gate lodges and an extensive stable complex.
    • The estate also contains lodges, coach houses and a walled garden.
    • As a child Mr Gawthorpe would often visit the park lodge where his uncle lived with his family, there to be plied with elderberry cordial in the summer.
    • During this period, Corona planted a new arboretum and created the bog garden and a walk was completed from the lodge to the house.
    • The house, the entrance lodge and garden of just over an acre comprise lot one.
    • There is only one lodge in this park, just one.
    • He rang at the gate and looked through its ironwork at the house until an elderly man came out of the gate lodge and opened a small wooden door in the wall.
    • It stood in its own park, with a lodge and a drive, partly to give privacy, partly to impress or even overawe visitors.
    • These include Blackrock Castle in Cork - not so long ago its gate lodge was used as a public house.
    • In Castlecore, the gate lodge retains many original features and carries a price tag of £140,000.
    • In the gate lodge, there is a living room, kitchen, bedroom and shower room.
    • The key to the gate lodge's appeal is the individuality of each building.
    • It was agreed that Gloria would stay for three weeks and would occupy the lodge in the garden of the Wood's house some 30 yards away.
    • The gate lodge is to be turned into accommodation for the full-time caretaker who will look after the site.
    Synonyms
    gatehouse, cottage, toll house
    1. 1.1 A small country house occupied in season for sports such as hunting, shooting, fishing, and skiing.
      (狩猎、射击、钓鱼、滑雪时节供人用的)乡间小屋
      a hunting lodge

      狩猎小屋。

      Example sentencesExamples
      • Only fragments remain of this royal hunting lodge, although there are some impressive earthworks including Bank Slack.
      • It has also been home to an admiral, a church minister and a teacher as well as being a hunting lodge.
      • Originally built in 1703 as a hunting lodge, it doubled as a soup kitchen during the Great Hunger.
      • An upscale lakeside lodge welcomes anglers, and stables are nearby.
      • The mansion looked more like a hunting lodge than the center for coordinating five million personnel.
      • Hunters may return to the lodge for lunch and siesta or make a day of it in the field.
      • The men's dorms are decorated in virile earth tones and the rugged wood and tweedy furniture gives you the feeling of being in a hunting lodge.
      • A few seconds later, the main ski lodge sped into view.
      • "Here we are, " Katie said, pulling up in front of the main ski lodge.
      • I motored away to the fishing lodge and reported this cheat to the fishery manager.
      • An itinerant court stayed at urban and rural palaces and hunting lodges.
      • She has not had the easiest person to live with, and for most of our married life our house has looked much more like a hunting lodge than a home.
      • In fact, if you stay in town and want to book a game drive, there are 43 hunting lodges in the area.
      • The hunting lodge was, indeed, ancient.
      • The king spent increasing amounts of time at his hunting lodge at Versailles, and by the late 1660s it was being regularly extended to accommodate his growing entourage.
      • All in all, it resembles the exclusive hunting lodge of some pompous lord and his friends.
      • If this place is a standard fishing lodge then I'll eat my hat.
      • For example, if you run a ski lodge, you could create a blog about the local skill hill.
      • The largest wooden structure in the islands, it's modeled after old English hunting lodges, with a full croquet course and pros to teach you the game.
      • Our tour operator drove 1,000 kilometres to meet us with a replacement guide, and we resumed our interrupted itinerary of dunes, game lodges and safari parks.
      Synonyms
      house, cottage, cabin, chalet
    2. 1.2 A large house or hotel.
      用于名字中宅,舍,旅馆
      Cumberland Lodge

      坎伯兰宅。

    3. 1.3 A porter's quarters at the main entrance of a college or other large building.
      (大学及其他大建筑门口的)门房
      Example sentencesExamples
      • The film, of which there is only one existing copy in the UK, has now arrived and is being stored in padlocked cans in the College lodge, and is due to be screened next week.
      • In college Cook then spotted a small poster in the porter's lodge.
      • This building was the main part of the lodge and flanking it were two dorms, which would house the girls and the boys separately.
      • Do the ducks still nest next to the porter's lodge near Staircase 1?
    4. 1.4 The residence of a head of a college, especially at Cambridge.
      (剑桥的)学院院长住宅
    5. 1.5 A North American Indian hut.
      印第安锥形棚屋
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Sweat lodges are traditionally low, windowless, insulated domes constructed of willow branches.
    6. 1.6 A beaver's den.
      海狸窝
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Visitors will be fascinated to see the lodges and dams that beavers build and, given the chance, will be delighted to watch these entertaining and intelligent animals.
      • One species is commonly found in beaver lodges!
      • In the next scene, he builds an airy dome, something like a beaver lodge, out of bleached driftwood.
      • Beaver lodges are also the work of a master builder.
      • In the pond were two beaver lodges and along the shore there were many examples of beaver-gnawed trees.
      • Like beavers, muskrats build lodges out of sticks, twigs, cattails and bulrushes, reinforcing them with mud.
      Synonyms
      den, lair, hole, sett
  • 2A branch or meeting place of an organization such as the Freemasons.

    (共济会等的)支部,会议室

    Example sentencesExamples
    • The scheme will be considered by representatives of lodges and other Masonic organisations who use the existing hall at a special meeting in November.
    • What set the clubs apart from masonic lodges and circles, however, was their involvement in politics.
    • He felt he was being punished for exposing the links between the business world, the Mafia, the secret Masonic lodges and the secret services.
    • Some of their public meetings and conventions were recorded, but I have been unable to locate minutes from any secret meetings of individual lodges.
    • The huge works are the membership registers of the 600 Freemason's lodges of Scotland, the ‘secret’ order reputed to wield legendary influence in the corridors of power.
    • Other than that, if you believe in helping others, enjoy ritual bonding and can find someone to introduce you to a lodge, Freemasonry might be just the thing.
    • The origins of the Freemasons are disputed, but the first organized lodges date from 1717 in England.
    • The Freemasons had dissolved their lodges under government pressure, and state employees in all professions were subject to dismissal for left-wing associations.
    • Between 800 and 900 Masonic lodges were founded in France between 1732 and 1793, two-thirds of them after 1760.
    • By the 1720s they had their own church with the establishment of the first Masonic lodges.
    • They had usually been long connected by business interests and had also engaged in social intercourse through associations such as Masonic lodges.
    • Scholars have placed women's participation in associations such as Masonic lodges and salons under an ever-increasing scrutiny.
    • He also made silver for churches, Masonic lodges, and mechanics' associations.
    • Losing faith in the customary avenues for change, they began to seek new outlets for their aspirations in Masonic lodges, provincial academies, and political clubs.
    • This is still a working lodge, but it also contains a museum of Freemasonry, which, as you'd expect, houses a few Burns items.
    • Towns were also cultural centres, the largest of which, by the second half of the eighteenth century, possessed theatres, masonic lodges, reading clubs, and newspapers.
    • He then moved to Helena where he entered the insurance business and became an American citizen as well as a member of the Montana Club and a Masonic lodge.
    • Masonic lodges set up charitable funds, and in several cities philanthropic societies were established in the 1780s to tap the wealth of the rich for the poor.
    • Historians have investigated union halls, fraternal lodges, and doomed third parties for insight into how the American working class has managed the dilemma of poverty in a land of plenty.
    • Returned to St Petersburg, they transformed the lodges into secret societies and plotted to bring constitutional rule to an autocratic, caste-ridden, and militaristic state.
    Synonyms
    section, branch, chapter, wing
verbläjlɑdʒ
  • 1with object Present (a complaint, appeal, claim, etc.) formally to the proper authorities.

    (向有关当局)正式提出(申诉,上诉,索赔)

    he has 28 days in which to lodge an appeal

    他可以在28天内提出上诉。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • They have also lodged a claim for damages, aggravated damages and costs.
    • The appeal was lodged with the council before Christmas, just as the six-month deadline for appeals was reached.
    • Jason's claim will be lodged with the courts following his 21st birthday in June.
    • Obviously, once the game is over teams can still lodge formal protests or complaints as they do now.
    • In 1997, a claim was lodged on behalf of 5,000 other clerical employees, all of them women.
    • This matter would be considered when the application was formally lodged to the Local Authority.
    • Complaints are lodged by the claimant victim or, if this is not possible, by relatives or representatives.
    • In my judgment, it cannot be said that the present application was lodged promptly.
    • He has now lodged a complaint with a hospital which sent her home.
    • It seems that the Appellant did not lodge a timely appeal against conviction.
    • Four individuals have now lodged complaints against the dentist, the health board has confirmed.
    • In excess of 70,000 Claimants have lodged claims and further claims are anticipated.
    • It is not the function of this Tribunal to comment on whether the unfair dismissal claim lodged by the Appellant was justified or not as the matter was settled.
    • They cannot leave it to the initiative of the next of kin either to lodge a formal complaint or to take responsibility for the conduct of the investigative procedures.
    • A full planning application is to be lodged with the council in April.
    • The following day government prosecutors lodged a formal appeal against the ruling.
    • The unfair dismissal claims were immediately lodged by the Union and hearings began in March 1999.
    • Three separate planning applications have been lodged with the local authority for the project.
    • Magistrates granted the two men conditional bail, but Gair immediately lodged an appeal against the decision.
    Synonyms
    submit, register, enter, put forward, place, advance, lay, present, press, bring, prefer, tender, proffer, put on record, record, table, file
    1. 1.1lodge something in/with Leave money or a valuable item in (a place) or with (someone) for safekeeping.
      存放,寄存(钱,贵重物品)
      Example sentencesExamples
      • Cllr Durcan said if the CPO was used the council could lodge the money in an account and leave it to the three people involved to sort out the payments.
      • On Wednesday it lodged this sum with the Central Bank to cover repayments.
      • It's understood Mrs Walsh intended to lodge the money in the bank, but the cash, all in notes, has yet to be recovered.
      • The ensuing arrangement between 1985 and 1988 saw the Prunas and other family members lodge large sums with the bank and get loans in return.
      • Two of the syndicate members lodged the ticket with the Bank of Ireland on New Year's Eve, but when they went to retrieve it last Friday the bank had to admit it had misplaced the ticket.
      Synonyms
      deposit, put, bank, entrust, consign
  • 2Make or become firmly fixed or embedded in a particular place.

    (把…)固定于;(使)嵌入

    with object they had to remove a bullet lodged near his spine

    他们要取出钻入他脊柱附近的子弹。

    no object figurative the image had lodged in her mind

    〈喻〉那景象深深地印入了她的脑海。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • I would, however, give the first place to rhyme, as a device which lodges a message firmly in some crevice of the mind.
    • She will undergo an operation on Monday to have the bullet, which is lodged near her spine, removed.
    • You should not be alarmed when it lodges in your brain and won't get out.
    • True to form, the arrow was lodged deep in the center of the target.
    • A gripping feeling lodged firmly in my chest.
    • This we find firmly lodged in the mid-region of the chest cavity.
    • When Hope and Gabe got home that day, Adele had an idea firmly lodged in her mind.
    • The bullet lodged near his pelvis and cannot be safely removed.
    • They lodged in the lungs of victims and began to grow into greenish moss.
    • A week ago last Friday is lodged firmly in my mind as the night I arrived home from work to find army, police and council workers busy evacuating my street.
    • He held his breath, stifling the cough that had lodged in his chest.
    • She hit the ground painfully, landing on an elbow and cheek, with the edge of the glass door swinging back to lodge firmly against her hip.
    • In the 1980s and early 1990s, acid rain was at the top of the environmental agenda, with images of dying forests and lakes firmly lodged in the public conscience.
    • The new research hints that particles can become more permanently lodged in the brain.
    • The little slivers of glass were, according to the X-ray, still lodged in his throat.
    • His poetry is great, firmly and rightly lodged in its place in literature.
    • The bullet lodged so near the brain that he suffered atrocious headaches for the next twenty years.
    • On July 12, 1988, Hecht was attending a weekly Republican luncheon when a piece of apple lodged firmly in his throat.
    • Is he strong enough to endure the pain of a bullet lodged somewhere in his body?
    • It was as though everything I'd experienced lodged itself firmly in my mind and I could think of nothing else.
    Synonyms
    become fixed, embed itself, become embedded, become implanted, become stuck, get stuck, stick, catch, wedge, become caught, become settled, anchor itself, become anchored, come to rest, remain
  • 3no object, with adverbial Stay or sleep in another person's house, paying money for one's accommodations.

    租房

    the man who lodged in the room next door

    租住隔壁房间的人。

    Example sentencesExamples
    • He lodged in a house in High Saint Agnesgate where he wrote mathematical treatise under his own name as well as working on part of Through the Looking Glass.
    • If accurate, this means that he had lodged in the house (not necessarily continuously) for at least two years before the marriage.
    • I wanted to know if you would be able to let Kevin lodge at your house.
    • We lodged in two rooms over a bar called The Oranges.
    • Up until the age of 26 I'd been lodging in a single room, sharing a house with people I might rather not have shared with, and feeling generally encroached upon.
    • By this stage we had reached the house where I lodged and as we walked in the front door, both carrying a cardboard box, one of the other female lodgers did a double take.
    • The composer Handel lodged in the house for three years towards the end of his life while the scientist Henry Cavendish had a room here during his youth.
    Synonyms
    reside, board, stay, have lodgings, have rooms, take a room, put up, live, be quartered, stop
    1. 3.1with object and adverbial Provide (someone) with a place to sleep or stay in return for payment.
      出租房子
      Example sentencesExamples
      • In general, French friends were lodged the on ground floor, Americans on the second, and children and servants of the guests on the third.
      • They were also demanding that the people lodged in different jails be released.
      • It was certainly not the purpose of the center to lodge prisoners.
      • Although bride and groom are lodged in separate institutions, previous clients say this temporary separation does enhance their relationship.
      • His paternal grandfather was lodged in a local asylum and his aunt ran a brothel in Copenhagen.
      • According to jail sources, as many as 11 women prisoners were lodged in this jail.
      • Tompkins is also restoring a century-old estate that will lodge avid tourist birdwatchers.
      • The Education Minister of Sudan received the group and we were lodged at the State Guest House.
      • They are lodged at a nice hotel, taken to a premiere, and allowed interviews with the stars.
      • Nevis came next, and we were lodged again beside the sea, this time in the huge Four Seasons hotel, which has taken over the best beach on the island.
      • I was lodged with her when the Russians invaded Czechoslovakia.
      Synonyms
      accommodate, provide accommodation for, put up, take in, house, board, billet, quarter, shelter, harbour, provide shelter for
  • 4with object (of wind or rain) flatten (a standing crop)

    (风,雨)使(庄稼)倒伏

    no object the variety is high yielding, but it has mostly lodged
    Example sentencesExamples
    • Lodging doubles the rate of decline in digestibility so lodged crops should be harvested as soon as possible.
    • Good crop residue distribution is even more important in cutting lodged wheat.
    • Soldier harvesters aren't very good at picking up lodged cane.
    • At harvest he noted that about a third of the field was standing well, about a third was heavily lodged and about a third was in between.
    • Now factor in such environmental impacts as weather, yield, moisture content, lodged crops, green weeds and ground speed.
    • Some equipment companies have attachments for the combine header to help pick up lodged corn.
    • Richard estimates that combine systems are able to harvest 90 to 95 percent of lodged sugarcane in a field.
    • Where there are heavy and lodged crops on these soils making baled silage might be a better option than using conventional harvesters with modern heavy trailers.

Origin

Middle English loge, via Old French loge ‘arbor, hut’ from medieval Latin laubia, lobia (see lobby), of Germanic origin; related to German Laube ‘arbor’.

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