They are bringing Lester`s 16 years of experience to their rotation and clubhouse. These sample phrases are automatically selected from various online information sources to reflect the current use of the word “clubhouse.” The opinions expressed in the examples do not represent the opinion of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us your feedback. Later, others arrived, obviously villagers, who made a kind of clubhouse from the village. “Clubhouse.” dictionary Merriam-Webster.com, Merriam-Webster, www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/clubhouse. Retrieved 8 October 2022. The meaning “family, including ancestors and descendants, especially if it is noble” dates back to about 1000. The meaning of the zodiac is first attested at the end of the 14th century. The legislative meaning (1540s) is transmitted by the building in which the body meets. The meaning of “audience in a theatre” dates back to the 1660s (transferred from the theatre itself, Schauspielhaus). Meaning “place of business” is 1580s. The specialized meaning of college and university (1530s) also applies to buildings and students together, a double meaning once found in relation to religious orders (late 14th century). As a dance club, DJ music style, probably from the Warehouse, a Chicago nightclub where the style is supposed to come from.
Rivera met Steinbrenner at the clubhouse, and the owner asked the nearest one if they were going to win. The ambassador and Mrs. Morton received a large number of friends in the dining room of the clubhouse. In 1768, the Leith Golf House was built on the same complexes in Leith, Scotland and became the first golf clubhouse. Leith`s ties still exist, but as a public park, not as a golf course. The Honourable Edinburgh Golfers` Company still exists, but today she lives in Muirfield, Scotland. Not all golf courses have a clubhouse. And for those who do, it`s very different from knowing how big or small the clubhouse is, luxurious or simple. As a general rule, the fancier the golf course is – another way of saying, the more expensive (or exclusive) it is to play – the more likely it is to have a very beautiful clubhouse.
In the clubhouse afterwards, Ruth of course applauded about her 60th Homer. The higher the green fees and the higher the amateur and clubhouse, the more likely it is that a club will have rules about what golfers can and cannot do in that clubhouse. A dress code, for example, or a rule about the use of mobile phones on the premises. The “clubhouse” is the main building of a golf course where golfers first go when they arrive on the course. The clubhouse contains the professional shop where golfers check in and pay, and usually includes some type of food and drink (whether it`s a large dining room, snack bar, or just drinks in a fridge). The consul being an avid golfer, Cunningham ostentatiously visited the clubhouse with its clubs and a night bag. Eventually, these private clubs often bought or built buildings next to or near the grounds where they played (for example, the Royal & Ancient Golf Club in St. Andrews next to the Old Course in St. Andrews). And these buildings were called “clubhouses” because they literally housed the club. We have a very nice clubhouse, and in its decoration a lot of taste and discrimination has been exercised. Five minutes later, with wild and hilarious eyes, they descended on the clubhouse with the miraculous news.
Ten pretty girls came out of the clubhouse, “shy” ten species of farm chickens in front of them! In large golf clubs, the clubhouse may also include a meeting room and a bar or lounge or changing rooms for golfers. Old English hus “apartment, shelter, building designed to be used as a residence”, from proto-Germanic *hūsan (source also from Old Norse, Old Frisian hus, Dutch huis, German house), unknown origin, possibly associated with the root of hide (v.) [OED]. In the Gothic only in the “temple” of Gudhu, literally “the house of God”; the common word for “house” in the Gothic period is razn according to OED. Nglish: Translation of the clubhouse for Spanish speakers From that point on, Parra was both a bench player and a symbol of the relaxed culture of the Nationals` clubhouse. “Clubhouse” – both the term and the physical structure that the term describes – is therefore not derived from golf clubs, as in equipment, but from golf clubs, as in associations. Also clubhouse, “place of meeting and refreshment always open to those who are members of the club”, 1805, club (n.) in the sense of associative + house (n.). Clubhouse Lawyer is a baseball slang from the 1940s. The energy in the canoe and in the clubhouse changed from that moment to the future. Marc Andreessen, who was also at the clubhouse session, then joked that he would get a job the next time he hung out in the lobby of one of his businesses. These habits run the risk of tearing feathers in any clubhouse, let alone a group of World Series champions filled with veterans. And clubs and clubhouses go back a very long time in the history of golf.
The first golf club (member association) was The Honourable Company of Edinburgh Golfers, founded in 1744 by golfers who played at the Leith Links in Scotland. The guys at Augusta National finally took the “No Girls Allowed” sign from the door of the clubhouse. The term “clubhouse” is derived from the original application of the term to golf courses. In pre-20th century Britain, private members-only golf clubs were built around existing golf courses. These clubs were not necessarily involved in managing the golf course their members played, but they attracted golfers who sought to become members for social reasons or as a way to gain better access to the course. If you wish to become a member of the Clubhouse, you must first introduce yourself to Pierre by e-mail. The theatre house dates back to 1871; in reference to “Have Sex, shack up”, 1968. House arrest was first observed in 1936. The house painter dates back to the 1680s. Housekeeping (n.) dates back to 1704.
On the house is “free” from 1889. House and house have been twinned allotarily since about 1200.