renting 的 3 个定义
- 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.
- a payment or series of payments made by a lessee to an owner in return for the use of machinery, equipment, etc.
- 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.
- (5)
- to grant the possession and enjoyment of in return for the payment of rent from the tenant or lessee..
- to take and hold in return for the payment of rent to the landlord or owner.
- to be leased or let for rent: This apartment rents cheaply.
- to lease or let property.
- to take possession of and use property by paying rent: She rents from a friend.
renting 近义词
fee paid for use, service, or privilege
opening, split
pay or charge fee for use, service, or privilege
更多renting例句
- 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.
- Sherry told the Blade she and other tenants paid their rent by the week.
- In addition to offering vans for rent, it’s open to members who already have their own vans.
- If a housing authority brings in fewer dollars from rent payments, it doesn’t get more money.
- Struggling restaurants say it’s a lifeline, letting them rehire bartenders, pay rent and reestablish relationships with customers.
- The first 30 years of his life, he helped his father build and then rent out Rockefeller Center at a difficult time.
- And actual vote-buying is a pretty low-rent form of corruption anyway.
- The winter air is rent with cries from thousands of puffed up lips, begging to be let in.
- Squeezing what rent he could from the tenants, Washington moved on.
- The journey began well, as Washington managed to collect some rent from war-ravaged tenants in Cumberland.
- Rent, the share of the land-owner, offered to the classicist a rather peculiar case.
- A fourth lives upon rent, dozing in his chair, and neither toils nor spins.
- You may have similar qualms over rent and the rightness and wrongness of it.
- He wishes to cultivate it still, and offers to renew the lease for any number of years, and pay the rent punctually.
- 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.