What's the difference between concierge and loge?

Concierge


Definition:

  • (n.) One who keeps the entrance to an edifice, public or private; a doorkeeper; a janitor, male or female.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) His latest thinking includes introducing concierge desks to welcome shoppers and tapas bars in its wine departments.
  • (2) Similarly, Facebook’s recent experimentation with its AI concierge, M, could lead to Zuckerberg having a more natural-language conversation with his own Jarvis than he’d be able to create on his own.
  • (3) At the time of purchase Henley Concierge was registered to a cottage on Borodin's £120m country estate near Henley-on-Thames, Oxfordshire.
  • (4) • 1050 East Palm Canyon Drive (+1 760 323 1858, thehorizonhotel.com ); double rooms from $109 The Movie Colony Movie Colony, Palm Springs Concierge John-Michael swears that Jim Morrison made the leap from balcony to pool here in 1969, and that Frank Sinatra was a resident while his nearby home was being renovated – and even though the myth of celebrity tends to get overblown, if not utterly fabricated, in southern California, we found no reason not to take him at his word.
  • (5) Hong Kong Rent: HK$40,000 (£3,160) shared between two Deposit: Three months rent Property: Two-bedroom, 84 sq m apartment with pool, gym, sauna, playground, shuttle-bus, concierge, gardens, car park and clubhouse Tenancy length: Two years Adrian Warr Adrian Warr, 35, moved to Hong Kong for a new job in PR earlier this year.
  • (6) He is not the only high-flyer to choose the slightly dog-eared charms of The White House over a Four Seasons suite with a mini-bar and 24-hour concierge somewhere abroad.
  • (7) He did not answer questions about Henley Concierge, but said he was invited to the 2013 event, which took place at Old Billingsgate market, City of London.
  • (8) "As One Commercial Street is located on the edge of the City, we have built a product that appeals to this market of young professionals and families who want to live close to their place of work and enjoy the benefits of a full concierge service and hotel style lobby, which they pay a premium for through their service charge.
  • (9) "The difficulty is, and this is what the developers will say, is that the high charges, the concierge charges, the charges for all the services in the building, cannot always be met in a uniform way by all the tenants, and that's why they make this case for dual access."
  • (10) His father, a former soldier, took work where he could find it – in a biscuit factory, as a concierge; his mother worked as a cleaner at the local bus station.
  • (11) And so I set off to do a little detective work of my own, to discover whether Maigret’s Paris, full of squalid, storied hotels with communal bathrooms, apartment buildings with nosy concierges and, most importantly, characterful regional bistros and hyper-provincial bars, could still be found.
  • (12) The development, which arrived in London at around the same time as the Bank's governor, is made up of four smart, concierge-served blocks of mainly one- and two-bedroom flats.
  • (13) There is luxury marble tiling and plush sofas, and a sign on the door alerts residents to the fact that the concierge is available.
  • (14) A concierge will do "anything from booking their flights to putting cartons of milk in their fridges", as the sales manager Alexander von Albert sells it.
  • (15) Not everything in the magazine is available on the Net-A-Porter website, but the firm promises to help shoppers find a way to buy most items, with links to brands' own websites or a concierge service.
  • (16) 5by (Free) Styling itself as a “video concierge”, this app is the work of website StumbleUpon, promising to provide a stream of web videos based on your interests, current mood and the time of day.
  • (17) A concierge at the Plaza on Monday referred questions to a spokeswoman, who subsequently declined to comment.
  • (18) Each hut will be made up of two traditional-looking huts cleverly joined together, allowing sleeping room for between four and six people, with one bedroom, fitted kitchen, bathroom, sitting area and 24-hour concierge service.
  • (19) Even banana republics have cash: it just ends up in the hands of a very few people – ask the bank managers of Switzerland or the hotel concierges of Paris.
  • (20) In 2012, when Songza relaunched its service with its "Music Concierge" option for contextual playlists, it was pioneering, and its steady growth in the US – it had 5.5 million active users by the end of 2013 – was the spur for those bigger rivals to introduce similar features.

Loge


Definition:

  • (n.) A lodge; a habitation.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Gastric emptying curves for all three meals in controls were best described using loge transformed counts.
  • (2) The mean of the within-person to between-person variance ratios, after exclusion of two outlying foods, was 3.4 for untransformed portion sizes, and 3.2 after portion sizes were loge-transformed.
  • (3) Reactivity to RESA showed the lowest titres in primigravid women, intermediate titres in nulligravid women and the highest titres in multigravid women (loge mean antibody = 3.28, 4.64, and 5.28, respectively, P less than 0.03), but was not associated with initial parasite density or response to chloroquine treatment.
  • (4) The permeability ratio of [99mTc]EHDP to the freely diffusible compound, sucrose, using the formula PS = -Fs loge (1 - Emax), was 0.71.
  • (5) Calculation of capillary permeability surface area product [PS = Fp loge (1 - E)] showed an increasing PS with plasma flows.
  • (6) Beside measurements of the wall structures in the region of the pisiform bone, the hook of hamate and the entrances of the loge, variations of muscles and the position of the ulnar artery and nerve with their terminal branches have also been examined.
  • (7) The surgical incision of the loge of Guyon, the carpal channel, the forearm and proximal of the lacertus fibrosus was persuaded.
  • (8) There is a stable, relatively small nucleus (a) of individual defects which stay in the same location for three years and mainly have the most severe loss (greater than or equal to 2.0 logE).
  • (9) Linear and base 10 logarithmic (log10) equations using primarily SF measures tended to have higher r2 and lower RFE than equations based on quadratic and natural logarithmic (loge) models and other anthropometric measures.
  • (10) An analysis of covariance revealed that the slopes for the regression of loge CBMW on HbA1c differed significantly (P = .02) among the three groups.
  • (11) A linear correlation between the protein binding parameter (loge P) and the frontier electron density (qr) was observed for the binding of this group of trichomonicidal drugs.
  • (12) Because of the small number of cases and the different types of lesion, pressure on the nerve in the "Loge de Guyon" cannot yet (in contrast to the CTS) be defined by intraoperative pressure recording.
  • (13) This is distinguished from a loge syndrome; the most typical clinical sign is increased pain in the territory of the sural nerve during plantar flexion of the ankle; in this position reduced sensory conduction velocity is measured.
  • (14) The mean loge coefficient of variation of 100 R-R intervals was significantly reduced in groups with Parkinson's disease, spinocerebellar degeneration, Shy-Drager syndrome and diabetes mellitus, compared with a normal control group.
  • (15) With the Kolmogorov-Smirnov difference test, the cumulative frequency of reaction diameters and loge-transformed diameters of all reactions and reactions to individual allergenic extracts differed significantly (p less than or equal to 0.01) from a normal distribution.
  • (16) One Thursday afternoon in January, the assistant manager, finishing up his work at Camp des Loges, took a call from Broad.
  • (17) In 40 hands of adults the 'loge de Guyon', a narrow bounded area within the proximal hypothenar region, has been dissected to realize an exact determination of the important characteristics of size.
  • (18) The elongated styloid process was discovered during tonsillectomy in the tonsilar loge.
  • (19) The passage of the ulnar nerve through the loge de Guyon at the volar aspect of the wrist is defined and described anatomically.
  • (20) The Swede was among a number of players to demand a transcript of the broadcast when they arrived at training at Camp des Loges on Sunday.

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