To stay : Verbe (word coming from box).
The verb “to lodge” has several meanings:
I) Intransitive verb:
1. To have sa dwelling (most of the time temporary) in a in law (remain, dwell, vivre ; colloquial: crecher, perch).
– Quotation from the French writer, philosopher, poet and playwright, member of the French Academy, Jules Romains (1885-1972): “These recent bourgeois who live in new neighborhoods”.
To what Hotel will you be staying? (to come down).
2.By metaphor and literature: us.
– Quote from the Genevan writer and philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778): “Debauchery and love cannot live together” (coexist).
II) Transitive verb:
1. Establish (someone) in a maison, way temporary ou development (to install).
Where will you house all this monde-there ? (put).
To lodge someone at home.
We can accommodate you for the night : shelter, lodge; colloquial: to fit.
Être carefully housed, times housed.
Adjective past participle: A apprentice housed and Fed.
Noun: The poorly housed.
Pronominal verb: He is difficult to stay in Paris.
“Here we lodge (travellers) at pied and cheval », registration of hostels of old.
To be housed at the same teaches.
Subject thing: Being likely to shelter, to host (to have).
This college can accommodate eight hundred students (to receive).
2. To put (a thing) somewhere (to put, place).
– Quotation from the French writer, philosopher, poet and playwright, member of the French Academy, Jules Romains (1885-1972): “Oak blades separated by grooves where one would have lodged the little finger”.
Specially: Do enter, make enter.
Lodge a bullet in the target.
The desperate has lodged a bullet in the head (if shoot).
Figurative meaning: To house a idea in the head from someone.
Pronominal verb: Quote from the French writer Honoré de Balzac (1799-1850): "Feeling that I was less a mother, less honest woman, remorse lodged in my heart".
3. Familiar: Identify, locate.
Criminals lodged by the police.
Quotation from the French writer and screenwriter Pierre Lemaitre (born in 1951): “We haven't housed the kidnapper yet”.
Opposites of lodging: dislodging, dismissing.