出典:Wiktionary
出典:『Wiktionary』 (2025/09/12 00:17 UTC 版)
From Italian logge, from Italian singular loggia, from Old French loge, from Late Latin laubia, from Frankish *laubjā (“pergola”).
From 中期英語 logge (“stick”), see below.
logge (plural logges)
Unknown, but probably connected to 中期英語 lugge (“pole”), from which obsolete/dialectal English lugg, lug (“pole; measure of length ~6 yd.; measure of land ~50 sq. yd.”). Cf. also clogge (“log”), clog.
Ending on -g may suggest Scandinavian origin, which has been proposed, from Old Norse lág (whence Norwegian Nynorsk låg (“fallen tree”)). However, the Norse vowel is long while 中期英語 vowel is short.
Discounting 13th-century surname Log, first attested as Medieval Latin loggiandum (“woodcutting”) in 1205 (in Rotuli litterarum clausarum), then Medieval Latin loggum (“piece of wood”) in 1306 (in Muniments of Dean and Chapter of Canterbury), while in actual ME attested only since 1398.
logge (plural logges)