Definition of Log in

1. Verb. Enter a computer. "Have you logged in lately?"

Exact synonyms: Log On, Log-in
Generic synonyms: Access
Antonyms: Log Out

Definition of Log in

1. Verb. (computing) To gain access to a computer system, usually by providing a previously agreed upon username and password. ¹

¹ Source: wiktionary.com

Lexicographical Neighbors of Log In

lofts
lofty
log
log-in
log-log paper
log Z's
log boat
log cabin
log cabins
log choker
log dog
log drive
log drives
log flumes
log in (current term)
log jam
log line
log off
log on
log out
log up
logagnosia
logagraphia
logamediate
logamnesia
loganate
loganberries
loganberry
loganias

Literary usage of Log in

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1. The Encyclopædia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences, Literature and by Hugh Chisholm (1911)
"Its employment in this sense depends on the fact that a piece of wood attached to a line was thrown overboard to lie like a log in a fixed position, ..."

2. A Journal of the Proceedings in Georgia, Beginning October 20, 1737: By by William Stephens (1906)
"Mr. Jones having received a Bruise^by an accidental Fall over a log in the Dark, could not well attend the Business this Day, which we were pursuing, ..."

3. Scientific American Reference Book by Albert Allis Hopkins, Alexander Russell Bond (1904)
"The number of cylindrical or stacked cubic feet in a log is computed by squaring the average diameter of the log in inches, multiplying by the length of the ..."

4. South Eastern Reporter by West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals, West Publishing Company, South Carolina Supreme Court (1922)
"Ward had the right to call on Grice to tie the log in question on the dredge bucket, and that Ward and Grice were not fellow servants. ..."

5. American Agriculturist (1847)
"... then one-fourth of the girth in inches, is multiplied by itself, and the product by the length of the log in feet, and the last product is then divided ..."

6. Forest Mensuration by Herman Haupt Chapman (1921)
"Square one- quarter of the remainder and multiply the result by the length of the log in feet. The result is the contents in board feet. ..."

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