lodging-house

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See also: lodging house

English[edit]

Noun[edit]

lodging-house (plural lodging-houses)

  1. Alternative form of lodging house.
    • 1851, Henry Mayhew, London Labour and the London Poor, volume 1, page 217:
      After some altercation with the "mot" of the "ken" (mistress of the lodging-house) about the cleanliness of a knife or fork, my new acquaintance began to arrange "ground," &c., for the night's work.
    • 1853, Charles Dickens, editor, Household Words[1], volume 21, page 64:
      A successful Australian digger — successful, not merely in siftings and washings, but bearing the title, and its best credentials, of a “nuggetter” − came down from Forest Creek recently and took up his abode in a low lodging-house in Little Bourke Street, Melbourne.
    • 1859, Snowden's Magistrates Assistant, page 87:
      [] going about the county half-naked, but having good clothes, perhaps sent forward to the lodging-house by his jomer (girl); this is very often a profitable trade; the shallow-cove of course selling all the clothes he does not need himself.
    • 1890, Jacob A[ugust] Riis, “The Cheap Lodging-houses”, in How the Other Half Lives: Studies among the Tenements of New York, New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, →OCLC, page 82:
      WHEN it comes to the question of numbers with this tramps’ army, another factor of serious portent has to be taken into account: the cheap lodging-houses.
    • 1891, Thomas Hardy, chapter LV, in Tess of the d’Urbervilles: A Pure Woman Faithfully Presented [], volume III, London: James R[ipley] Osgood, McIlvaine and Co., [], →OCLC, phase the seventh (Fulfilment), page 234:
      “That’s it!” cried Clare, pleased to think that she had reverted to the real pronunciation. “What place is The Herons?”
      “A stylish lodging-house. ’Tis all lodging-houses here, bless ’ee.”
    • 1899, Josiah Flynt, Tramping with Tramps[2], New York: Century, published 1901, Part 1, Chapter 6, p. 146, footnote 1:
      In Germany and England the tramps usually eat their set-downs in cheap restaurants or at lodging-houses.
    • 1908, O. Henry, “The Shocks of Doom” in The Voice of The City: Further Stories of the Four Million, Doubleday, Page & Co., 1914, pp. 96-7,[3]
      He was either young or old; cheap lodging-houses had flavored him mustily; razors and combs had passed him by; in him drink had been bottled and sealed in the devil’s bond.
    • 1913, Baroness Orczy [i.e., Emma Orczy], “Of That There Could Be No Question”, in Eldorado: An Adventure of the Scarlet Pimpernel, London: Hodder & Stoughton; New York, N.Y.: George H[enry] Doran Company, →OCLC, part I, page 210:
      The porte-cochère of his former lodging-house was not yet open; he took up his stand close beside it.
    • 1933 January 9, George Orwell [pseudonym; Eric Arthur Blair], chapter XXV, in Down and Out in Paris and London, London: Victor Gollancz [], →OCLC:
      [] I went for a night to a lodging-house in Bow, where the charge was only eightpence.
    • 2002, Meg Arnot, Cornelie Usborne, Gender And Crime in Modern Europe, page 82:
      A boy called Hewitt, awaiting transportation on the Euryalus hulk in the mid-1830s, told an interviewer that the swell-mob would often call into lodging-houses in order to recruit "go-alongs" for thieving expeditions: "boys are delighted [they] think it an honour to go with a swell-mob".