0 a person who is employed to take care of an apartment building, especially in France:
The concierge knocked on the door of their apartment following complaints about noise.
The concierge shrugged and said she was out.
Other hotel staff who expect a tip include a concierge who books tickets for a show and a doorman who hails a taxi.
She worked as a concierge in the first-class lounge at Dulles International Airport.
Staff perks include a concierge, an ironing service, discounted concert tickets, and an on-site creche.
Benefits range from corporate concierge services to masseuses.
With a publishing concierge it is like having your very own industry expert there for all of your publishing needs.
1 a person working in a hotel, etc. whose job is to help guests, for example by giving them information about restaurants, local places to see, etc.:
The restaurant receives many last-minute requests from hotel concierges hoping to score a table reservation for guests.
One prospective member was asked not to return after he screamed at the club's concierge in public because of a scheduling mix-up that was his own fault.
We rented ocean-side condos and concierges to attend to their every whim.
The findings suggest that the team needs to offer better continuity of care and might act as a concierge, an advocate, or a buddy.
Among the staff focus groups, a theme emerged that the team should act like a buddy system or concierge.
Officers who know the patch work with local people who live there, often acting as concierges in blocks, with radios, walkie-talkies, and so on.
We shall get the concierges and entry phones into the high-rise flats, and we shall do all in our power to deter the offenders.