Loge vs Logy - What's the difference?
loge | logy |
A booth or stall.
The lodge of a concierge.
* 1936 , Djuna Barnes, Nightwood , Faber & Faber 2007, p. 70:
An upscale seating region in a modern concert hall or sports venue, often in the back lower tier, or on a separate tier above the mezzanine.
* '>citation
An exclusive box or seating region in older theaters and opera houses, having wider, softer, and more widely spaced seats than in the gallery.
* '>citation
Slow to respond or react; lethargic.
* 1910 , "
* 1956 . “I was still logy with sleep; I shook my head to try to clear it”. Double Star .
Terms formed with the -logy suffix.
* 1856 , Joseph Young, Demonology; or, the Scripture doctrine of Devils , page 372:
* 1891 , (Thomas Hardy), (w, Tess of the d'Urbervilles) , :
As a verb loge
is .As an adjective logy is
slow to respond or react; lethargic.As a noun logy is
terms formed with the -logy suffix.loge
English
Noun
(en noun)- About three in the morning, Nora knocked at the little glass door of the concierge's loge , asking if the doctor was in.
- In major league stadiums the press box is usually located between the first and second decks in the loge level.
- Patte notes that the spectators who were seated there were too close to the action to frame it as real, and that the loges in the avant-scène hampered the effect of the voice.
Anagrams
* ----logy
English
Etymology 1
Attested from the 19th century, of uncertain origin, perhaps from Dutch log "heavy, dull".Adjective
(er)Duck Eats Yeast," The Yakima Herald :
- Perkins discovered his prize duck in a logy condition.
- The steering seems logy , you have to turn the wheel well before you want to turn.
Etymology 2
Nominalization of the -logy suffix.Noun
(logies)- The many Logies and Isms that have lately come into vogue.
- The perception arrested him less when he reflected that what are called advanced ideas are really in great part but the latest fashion in definition—a more accurate expression, by words in logy and ism, of sensations which men and women have vaguely grasped for centuries.