rent out / rɛnt /

租出出租租用租出去

rent out3 个定义

n. 名词 noun
  1. a payment made periodically by a tenant to a landlord in return for the use of land, a building, an apartment, an office, or other property.
  2. a payment or series of payments made by a lessee to an owner in return for the use of machinery, equipment, etc.
  3. Economics. the excess of the produce or return yielded by a given piece of cultivated land over the cost of production; the yield from a piece of land or real estate.
v. 有主动词 verb
  1. to grant the possession and enjoyment of in return for the payment of rent from the tenant or lessee..
  2. to take and hold in return for the payment of rent to the landlord or owner.
v. 无主动词 verb
  1. to be leased or let for rent: This apartment rents cheaply.
  2. to lease or let property.
  3. to take possession of and use property by paying rent: She rents from a friend.

rent out 近义词

rent out

等同于 farm out

rent out 的近义词 5
rent out

等同于 lease

rent out 的近义词 6
rent out 的反义词 1

更多rent out例句

  1. It wasn’t just a question of how the restaurant was going to pay rent month-to-month, but also how they could afford to pay what would amount to more than $30,000 in missed rent at the end of the year.
  2. Sherry told the Blade she and other tenants paid their rent by the week.
  3. In addition to offering vans for rent, it’s open to members who already have their own vans.
  4. If a housing authority brings in fewer dollars from rent payments, it doesn’t get more money.
  5. Struggling restaurants say it’s a lifeline, letting them rehire bartenders, pay rent and reestablish relationships with customers.
  6. The first 30 years of his life, he helped his father build and then rent out Rockefeller Center at a difficult time.
  7. And actual vote-buying is a pretty low-rent form of corruption anyway.
  8. The winter air is rent with cries from thousands of puffed up lips, begging to be let in.
  9. Squeezing what rent he could from the tenants, Washington moved on.
  10. The journey began well, as Washington managed to collect some rent from war-ravaged tenants in Cumberland.
  11. Rent, the share of the land-owner, offered to the classicist a rather peculiar case.
  12. A fourth lives upon rent, dozing in his chair, and neither toils nor spins.
  13. You may have similar qualms over rent and the rightness and wrongness of it.
  14. He wishes to cultivate it still, and offers to renew the lease for any number of years, and pay the rent punctually.
  15. The high rent of a Broadway store, says the economist, does not add a single cent to the price of the things sold in it.