log book
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Also see: book
Multiple Entries:The entry for 'log' is displayed below.
Also see: book
log -log -logue
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
log1
▶noun
- 1 a part of the trunk or a large branch of a tree that has fallen or been cut off.
- 2 (also logbook) an official record of events during the voyage of a ship or aircraft.
- 3 an apparatus for determining the speed of a ship, originally one consisting of a float attached to a knotted line.
- 1 enter (something) in a log.
■ achieve (a certain distance, speed, or time).
- 2 (log in/on or off/out) go through the procedures to begin (or conclude) use of a computer system.
- 3 cut down (an area of forest) to exploit the wood commercially.
– derivatives
logger noun,
logging noun.
logger noun,
logging noun.
word history: Log is a Middle English word of obscure origin. The link between the original sense of the noun, ‘a part of a tree that has fallen or been cut off’, and the verb ‘enter something in a log’ is found in sense 3 of the noun, ‘an apparatus for determining the speed of a ship’. This originally consisted of a ‘log’ or wooden float attached to a very long knotted line; the log was tossed overboard and the length of line run out in a certain time was used as an estimate of the vessel's speed. From here came the notion of a ship's journal or logbook, in which a detailed daily record of a voyage was entered, and so the verb developed. See also knot1.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
log2
▶noun short for logarithm.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
-log
▶combining form US spelling of -logue.
Concise Oxford English Dictionary © 2008 Oxford University Press:
-logue (US also -log)
▶combining form
- 1 denoting discourse of a specified type: dialogue.
- 2 denoting compilation: catalogue.
- 3 equivalent to -logist.
– origin from Fr. -logue, from Gk -logos, -logon.

