Lot
Appearance
(Redirected from Lots)
Lot, LOT, The Lot or similar may refer to:
Common meanings
[edit]Areas
[edit]- Land lot, an area of land
- Parking lot, for automobiles
- Backlot, in movie production
Sets of items
[edit]- A great many of something, as in, "There are a lot of beetles," or "There are lots of beetles."
- Lot number, in batch production
- Lot, a set of goods for sale together in an auction; or a quantity of a financial instrument
Chance
[edit]- Sortition (drawing lots)
- Cleromancy, divination by casting lots
- Arabian lots, or Arabic parts, an astrological divination technique
People
[edit]- Lot (name), including a list of people with the given name
- Lot (biblical person), figure in the Book of Genesis
- King Lot, in Arthurian legend
Places
[edit]- Lot, Belgium, a village in the municipality of Beersel
- Lot (department), in southwest France
- Lot (river), in southern France
- Lostock railway station, Bolton, England
- Lewis University Airport, Illinois, US
- The Lot, or Samuel Goldwyn Studio, Hollywood, California, US
Arts and media
[edit]Film and television
[edit]- The Lot (TV series), a short-lived AMC series
- The Lot (cinema), an American movie theater chain
- Backlot, in movie production
- The Lot, or Samuel Goldwyn Studio, Hollywood, California, US
- Legends of Tomorrow, a science fiction series
- Lot Lohr , a character in the Dutch television show Sesamstraat (Sesame Street)
Other media
[edit]- The Lot (album), a 2013 compilation by Roger Taylor
- The Lot Radio, an online radio station in New York City
- "Lot", a story by Ward Moore
- "Lot", by Christie Front Drive from Christie Front Drive, 1994
Businesses and organisations
[edit]- LOT Polish Airlines, the flag carrier airline of Poland
- The LOT Network Solution, a membership organization to avoid patent litigation
- National Weather Service Chicago, Illinois (WFO ID LOT)
- The Lot (cinema), an American movie theater chain
Other uses
[edit]- Lot (unit), a unit of mass
- Large Orbiting Telescope, the Hubble Space Telescope
- lot, a device for steering a boat, as mentioned in Belyana
- Language of thought, a philosophical hypothesis