3 to pay rent to stay somewhere: --
She lodged with Mrs Higgins when she first came to Cambridge.
4 a small house in the country, used especially by people on holiday or taking part in sports, or one on land belonging to a large house: --
5 a local group of an organization such as the Freemasons: --
a Masonic Lodge
Tuition fees as well as the cost of board and lodging are all free to participating quartets.
Responsibility for the liquidation of government assets, a clear example of such activity, has been lodged to cabinet departments, independent commissions or government corporations.
There are two observations about this assumption that can be lodged.
In the data used, lodging was recorded by visual assessment of the proportion of lodging in the field.
After determining the parameters describing the susceptibility to lodging, their correlation with the physical properties of varieties was straightforward to calculate.
Protests against the writs were lodged in 1314, 1315 and 1316.
Differences in lodging between barley varieties are relevant for two main reasons.
What has not been achieved is good lodging resistance in all short spring wheats, nor a complete understanding of its physiological basis.