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Most people naturally assume that a masonic lodge is a meeting place for Freemasons. However, the masonic lodge actually refers to the Masons themselves, not just their meeting hall, as a lodge can be opened anywhere enough Masons have assembled.

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The term is defined several ways by Masonic authors, but it is currently used to refer to three general things:

- A specific group of Freemasons that regularly meet together under a Warrant or Charter; e.g. St John's Lodge No. 1, The Grand Lodge of England, or the Pennsylvania Lodge of Research.

- An official meeting of Freemasons for a specific purpose; e.g. a Lodge of Master Masons, a Lodge of Entered Apprentice Masons, a Lodge of Sorrow, or a Table Lodge.

- It can also refer to the place where Freemasons hold their meetings, although that specific place would properly be called the Lodge Room. The building is more typically referred to as a Masonic Hall, or Masonic Temple, but some will call it, informally, the Masonic Lodge. Originally, the term lodge did refer to the building, in the form of a small hut or shelter, where stone masons who were engaged in building a large structure would gather.

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