leger

Valid in Scrabble

Scrabble points
6
Words With Friends
8
Letters
5
Pronunciation
/ˈlɛd͡ʒə(ɹ)/

Definition of leger

7 senses · 4 parts of speech · etymology included

adj

  1. (obsolete)Light; slender, slim; trivial.
See all 7 definitions

adj

  1. (obsolete)Light; slender, slim; trivial.
  2. Lying or remaining in a place; hence, resident.
    “a leger ambassador”

noun

  1. An ambassador or minister resident at a court or seat of government; a leiger or lieger.
    “Sir Edward Carne, the queen's leger at Rome”
  2. (obsolete)Anything that lies in a place; that which, or one who, remains in a place.
  3. (alt-of, alternative, obsolete)Alternative form of ledger (“book for keeping notes, especially one for keeping accounting records”).
    “The Leger exhibits at one view the accounts with an individual, as it contains on the Dr. [debt] side whatever he has received, and on the Cr. [credit] side whatever he has paid. […] Let each account be posted from the Day Book in its proper place in the Leger. If a mistake be made, let it be corrected by an account in the Day Book, clearly stating the correction, and then let this account be posted in its proper place in the Leger, that no blot or erasure may disfigure its pages.”
    “[T]his city of "merchants, whose counting-houses are their churches, whose money is their God, and whose legers, (defaced legers, of course, the delegate from Indiana will understand me,) whose legers are their bibles."”
    “The original charges, however, are made in what is called a day book, where they are written one after another, in the order in which the transactions occur. During the hours of leisure, these charges are copied into another book, […] the account of each man being placed under his name. This book is called the leger. The act of copying from the day book into the leger is called posting.”

verb

  1. (British, alt-of, alternative, ambitransitive)Alternative form of ledger (“to use (a certain type of bait) in bottom fishing; to engage in bottom fishing”).
    “Night-lines are made of water-cord, with the hooks about half-a-yard apart, baited with worms, loach, gudgeons, &c.; a brick is fastened to each end of the line to sink it, or a peg at one end and a brick at the other, and laid obliquely across the stream. They are also often taken when Legering for Barbel, […]”
    “Messrs. E. Frost and Tomkins, at Monkey Island, in two days, caught 80 lbs. weight of chub, dace, and roach with the fly and cheese paste, and in legering a trout of 2¼ lbs.”
    “The added advantage of legering a small bait rather than freelining one is that you can tighten up harder to the bait and so spot runs earlier.”
    “The flounder spends its life between the tideline and the 25 to 30 fathoms mark, but they are often caught several miles upstream in freshwater rivers by anglers legering worms or gentles.”

name

  1. A surname.

Definitions from Wiktionary, CC BY-SA.

Etymology

Borrowed from Middle French legier, from Old French legier, apparently from Late Latin *leviārium, from levis (“light in weight”). See levity.

Anagrams of leger

5 plays · some not in Scrabble

Hooks

1 extension · 1 back

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