Meaning: An idiosyncratic way of saying the gate area or boarding lounge.
2
Last time he used the lounge was six weeks before the fire.
3
Upstairs there's an extensive lounge area that is currently not in use.
4
But the resulting place feels less souk than Duty Free airport lounge.
5
I suggest he be given a free chit for the Monarch lounge.
1
The men searched everywhere; there was but one loaf in the boat.
2
The loaf improves in flavour for several days and needs no icing.
3
Baking times vary according to the loaf size and choice of cycle.
4
Put the egg in last, and carefully pour over loaf; Serve hot.
5
Bake in large greased loaf pan in moderate oven about one hour.
1
The times and tides of business and debate tarry for no man.
2
Give me my staff; and tarry in yon chamber to the left.
3
Satisfied on this account, her brother said she should not tarry long.
4
The longer we tarry, the farther word will spread about our intentions.
5
The muster shall begin at once, and wait for none that tarry.
1
Drink long; in this wine lurk the seeds of the life everlasting.
2
Behind the sordid details of Kenneth Starr's report lurk two critical questions.
3
Dangerous plants don't just lurk in Amazon rain forests or tropical jungles.
4
A dreadful order seemed to lurk in the darkest shadows of life.
5
It might lurk in deep ocean waters in areas sensors don't reach.
1
Texting works better and Portcullis House's atrium is the place to loiter.
2
Naked in other respects, they loiter away whole days by the fireside.
3
Stand and watch, lurk and loiter for a while and nobody notices.
4
They loiter around the entrance, trying to look neither embarrassed nor excited.
5
Here is some money; go quickly, and don't loiter by the way.
1
Think of the people to whom your bottles of footle go!
2
I can't stand his 'Theatre'-that'sfootle-butthe big things-'LePere Goriot,' 'La Cousine Bette,' 'Cesar Birotteau'-what a great book 'Cesar Birotteau' is!-
3
And redolent of footle;
4
She felt it was a footling question even as she asked it.
5
I'm not such an ass as to fall off a footling balcony.
1
She said politely, 'I don't know how to lollygag, madam, but I will do my best.'
2
I leave school at five p.m., and if I don't lollygag around, then I will get home around five-thirty.
3
Don't lollygag, Madeleine snapped.
4
Then he shook his head, his ears and lips flapping, and walked away like he had business and couldn't lollygag around with me.
5
"I'll kick your ass if you lollygag."
1
Crowds millabout the doors at all times and in all weather.
2
I will see him at the millabout half-past nine in the morning.
3
After Reno leaves them, the trainees begin to millabout and talk quietly.
4
I millabout on my own for a few minutes, taking in the place.
5
When people millabout like that, they usually just want to say something nice.
1
He trotted off the stage, leaving the audience to millaround, talking.
2
Men in suits millaround, comparing resolution, storage capacity and price.
3
It is a popular haunt in Galway and people millaround the bar.
4
The dead spirits in the cemetery began to millaround in rising panic.
5
But they STILL wouldn't do anything other than millaround and be angry.
1
House construction costs hangaround, rising very slowly from the base year.
2
I sure hope they don't ever decide to hangaround here again.
3
I don't think I want to hangaround in it much longer.
4
You'll get used to it if you hangaround here long enough.
5
You hangaround the captain long enough, you get used to it.
1
I have no time to messabout with good deeds, Joel thought.
2
There never was such a messabout anything since London first began.
3
We do messabout anyway but this is on another level.
4
And 'e doesn't messabout much over the preparing of it'.
5
They had struck a cautious truce since resolving the messabout Brad's slot.