What's the difference between landlady and lodge?

Landlady


Definition:

  • (n.) A woman having real estate which she leases to a tenant or tenants.
  • (n.) The mistress of an inn or lodging house.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) • Petra's spinster landladies added caraway seeds to their mix.
  • (2) He was very intelligent but always slightly sinister,” said Alice Williams, who knew him while landlady of the Rose and Crown pub near Rye.
  • (3) The landlady of the local Woodman pub, Kath Dewhurst, recalled the multimillionaire dropping in to do the quiz with his wife, Julie.
  • (4) One landlady, Karen Murphy from the Red, White and Blue pub in Portsmouth, and two importers of the supposedly illicit decoder cards took their appeal to Europe.
  • (5) We have booked a room at the Zumstein, where the landlady leads us past a dismal old people's home lounge to our room, which is dusty as a tomb.
  • (6) His friend Arabella Weir , who was his landlady when he moved to London, once said he had a "steely determination".
  • (7) Jan Perry, the landlady of the Old Mill House pub, Polperro, said she had never known flooding like it.
  • (8) One in Streatham, a rather prissy one where men weren't allowed to come in [there is a whole section in CIAB on landladies, the horror of].
  • (9) Photograph: Graeme Robertson for the Guardian Bethen Thorpe, an actor and former pub landlady from Highgate, north London, also expects to be among the 200,000 people who face having their benefit stopped under the measures in Wednesday’s budget.
  • (10) They have included a battle with a Portsmouth pub landlady over the practice of beaming in Premier League matches from abroad and a series of skirmishes between Sky Sports and its rivals over the wholesale prices it charges for its channels.
  • (11) "But my big fear is that my landlady will decide to sell the house and I will have to move.
  • (12) We can't bear to hand over £100 for this so do a runner, ending up instead at the Hotel Flora, which is slightly better, even though the landlady refuses to let us see a room first, insisting, "No!
  • (13) Through her friendship with a rich cast of characters, including eccentric marijuana-growing landlady, Anna Madrigal and quiet young gay man Michael Tolliver (known as Mouse), Maupin's sparkling comedy chronicles Mary Ann's adventures in 70s San Francisco.
  • (14) Mr Warrell believes many drawings, including a tender study of a sleeping woman, may represent Sophia Booth, the Margate seaside boarding house landlady with whom he is sure Turner had a long sexual relationship.
  • (15) When he took up residency in Royal Crescent, his landlady would turf him out in the morning so she could clean the room.
  • (16) In my second year our landlady charged us £32 a week, but we only had to pay half rate at Christmas and Easter and nothing over the summer.
  • (17) The film charts this time in his life, and his eventual love affair with his landlady, Mrs Booth.
  • (18) Turn is based on Alexander Rose's 2007 book Washington's Spies: The Story of America's First Spy Ring, which tells how Woodhull, a pub landlady and a fisherman, among others, risked their necks resisting the British occupation of New York.
  • (19) Landlady Tracy Daly said that everyone had kept warm and cheerful working in shifts to dig a way through snowdrifts piled up against the doors, 1,732ft above sea level.
  • (20) She was Turner’s Margate landlady, a widow who became his dearly beloved, and with whom he went to live, in secret, in Chelsea.

Lodge


Definition:

  • (n.) A shelter in which one may rest; as: (a) A shed; a rude cabin; a hut; as, an Indian's lodge.
  • (n.) A small dwelling house, as for a gamekeeper or gatekeeper of an estate.
  • (n.) A den or cave.
  • (n.) The meeting room of an association; hence, the regularly constituted body of members which meets there; as, a masonic lodge.
  • (n.) The chamber of an abbot, prior, or head of a college.
  • (n.) The space at the mouth of a level next the shaft, widened to permit wagons to pass, or ore to be deposited for hoisting; -- called also platt.
  • (n.) A collection of objects lodged together.
  • (n.) A family of North American Indians, or the persons who usually occupy an Indian lodge, -- as a unit of enumeration, reckoned from four to six persons; as, the tribe consists of about two hundred lodges, that is, of about a thousand individuals.
  • (v. i.) To rest or remain a lodge house, or other shelter; to rest; to stay; to abide; esp., to sleep at night; as, to lodge in York Street.
  • (v. i.) To fall or lie down, as grass or grain, when overgrown or beaten down by the wind.
  • (v. i.) To come to a rest; to stop and remain; as, the bullet lodged in the bark of a tree.
  • (n.) To give shelter or rest to; especially, to furnish a sleeping place for; to harbor; to shelter; hence, to receive; to hold.
  • (n.) To drive to shelter; to track to covert.
  • (n.) To deposit for keeping or preservation; as, the men lodged their arms in the arsenal.
  • (n.) To cause to stop or rest in; to implant.
  • (n.) To lay down; to prostrate.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) That’s when you heard the ‘boom’.” Teto Wilson also claimed to have witnessed the shooting, posting on Facebook on Sunday morning that he and some friends had been at the Elk lodge, outside which the shooting took place.
  • (2) About 40% of the claims were lodged in Germany compared with only 4% in Britain.
  • (3) Platelets appear to be involved in tumor cell lodgement, since thrombocytopenia significantly reduces the number of lodged tumor cells.
  • (4) It has emerged that Kelvin MacKenzie , who attacked the decision by Channel 4 News in his Sun column and called on readers to complain to the media regulator, did not in fact end up lodging a complaint himself.
  • (5) A custody or visitation dispute occurred in 12 (39%) of 31 sexual abuse complaints lodged against a parent.
  • (6) Before bids being lodged, sources had indicated that Sky was not prepared to make a knockout bid to snatch back the rights from BT, which has justified the expense to customers and shareholders as “financially disciplined”.
  • (7) It was shown that CO2 levels previously recorded in the winter lodges of this species are sufficient to reduce postdive oxygen consumption and rate of rewarming in unrestrained animals.
  • (8) The catheter fragments were lodged in the pulmonary artery in 3 cases and in the right atrium in the others.
  • (9) The venue was originally home to Marlesford Lodge school, which was remodelled as a boarding school in 1884.
  • (10) But in a last-ditch effort, his lawyers lodged an appeal for clemency on Monday morning.
  • (11) Griffin vowed to lodge a complaint at the "unfair" way the Question Time programme was produced, despite the BNP's claims that his appearance sparked the "biggest single recruitment night in the party's history".
  • (12) Scarborough council said leaving the houses standing could cause a domino-effect down the steep slope above the picturesque harbour where the explorer Captain James Cook lodged and learned his seafaring skills.
  • (13) His greatest passion on the trek up, apart from finding a 3G signal and playing rap music from a speaker on the back of his pack, was playing Tigers and Goats, a local version of chess, taking on all-comers – climbers, Sherpas, trekkers, random elderly porters passing through the lodges.
  • (14) It is the latest attack on the government from the Hungarian economist, whose previous criticism of David Cameron's "nasty" looking restrictions on benefits for foreigners led the angry prime minister to lodge a formal complaint.
  • (15) However, an increasing body of experts argues something must be done to arrest disengagement by winning over this so-called Generation Y, born after 1982, who are predicted to be poorer than their parents, and according to Ipsos Mori research, have a record low level of trust in their fellow man.Guy Lodge, of the IPPR thinktank, makes the case for an even more radical solution – compulsory voting for first-timers.
  • (16) For that you will be expected to provide full board and lodging.
  • (17) The angioarchitecture of the cortical gray-white junction suggests that an air embolism might preferentially lodge in this border zone, and thus ischemia of the border might go unrecognized if one depended only on the difference in average blood flow to define the gray-white junction.
  • (18) He also lodged a patent for a new vaccine against measles called Transfer Factor, which he claimed could also be a treatment for inflammatory bowel disease.
  • (19) It is unknown whether metastasis of cancer to cancer is a random occurrence or is due to selective lodging, survival and growth within another malignant neoplasm.
  • (20) Preliminary murder charges have been lodged against two men – both students at Islamic religious schools, who were arrested at the scene after being overpowered by bystanders – and against a third assailant who fled and has yet to be found, an officer said.

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