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loge
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Loge

Loge \Loge\, n. [F. See Lodge.] A lodge; a habitation. [Obs.]
--Chaucer.

Wiktionary
loge

n. 1 A booth or stall. 2 The lodge of a concierge. 3 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. 4 An exclusive box or seating region in older theaters and opera houses, having wider, softer, and more widely spaced seats than in the gallery.

WordNet
loge
  1. n. balcony consisting of the forward section of a theater mezzanine

  2. private area in a theater or grandstand where a small group can watch the performance; "the royal box was empty" [syn: box]

Wikipedia
Loge

Loge may refer to:

Loge (moon)

Loge ( or spelling pronunciation ), or Saturn XLVI (provisional designation S/2006 S 5), is a natural satellite of Saturn. Its discovery was announced by Scott S. Sheppard, David C. Jewitt, Jan Kleyna, and Brian G. Marsden on 26 June 2006, from observations taken between January and April 2006.

Loge is about 6 kilometres in diameter, and orbits Saturn at an average distance of 23,142.0 Mm in 1314.364 days, at an inclination of 166.5° to the ecliptic (165.3° to Saturn's equator), in a retrograde direction and with an eccentricity of 0.1390.

It was named in April 2007, after Loge (also spelled Logi), a fire giant from Norse mythology, son of Fornjót, sometimes confused with the god Loki. These two figures were merged into Loge in Richard Wagner's Der Ring des Nibelungen.

Usage examples of "loge".

But at that instant the door from the office opened and the man whom he knew only as Loge entered the room.

Cleggett, looking Loge fixedly in the eye, withdrew his right hand from beneath his coat, and laid his magazine pistol on the table under his hand.

CHAPTER XI REPARTEE AND PISTOLS Loge dropped his gaze to the pistol, and the smile upon his lips slowly turned into a sneer.

The next instant Pierre tumbled headlong through the hole, landing upon Loge, who, not braced for the shock, went down himself.

And as for Cleggett, although he might have shot down Loge a dozen times over, he was so astonished at what he saw that the thought never entered his head.

But Loge, his hat gone, his coat tails level in the wind behind him, and his large patent leather shoes flashing in the morning sunlight, was overhauling him with long and powerful strides.

In the forward part of the machine stood Loge, raving in an almost demoniac fury and pointing at the box.

Hoisting himself, as it were, on a mounting billow of his own profanity, Loge cast himself with a wide swimming motion of his arms from the auto.

Three hundred yards away, however, Loge rose again and shook a furious fist at the Jasper B.

Having failed to purchase it, having failed to recover the box from it, Loge had sought to destroy it with all on board.

The book showed that Loge had been employed as an expert operator, in the pay of a certain radical organization, to pull off dynamiting jobs in various parts of the country.

Cleggett was astonished at the number of jobs which Loge had engineered.

With a vanity almost inconceivable to those who have not reflected upon the criminal nature, Loge had written here the tale of his own life, for his own reading.

From the starboard bow Captain Abernethy shrilled a cry of warning, and the heavy, bellowing voice of Loge shouted an answer of challenge and ferocity.

Cleggett saw Loge and his followers, machete in hand, flinging themselves at the rail.