释义 |
Definition of lease in English: leasenoun liːslis A contract by which one party conveys land, property, services, etc. to another for a specified time, usually in return for a periodic payment. (土地、房产、服务等的)租约 a six-month lease on a shop Example sentencesExamples - What happens if one of you decides to terminate the lease on short notice?
- There is an option to renew the lease for a further period when it expires in September of this year.
- Read the lease to find out what's been specified in your case and check out rental laws in your area.
- Businesses negotiating commercial leases of property will not want to assume any technical exposure for any uninsured terrorist risk.
- While each transaction has individually tailored lease terms, operating leases typically range 3-12 years in length.
- Gross irregularity and corruption in granting the mining lease are involved.
- Also, they should know for how long the lease should be and how much they want to pay a month.
- Closed-end leases, sometimes called ‘walk-away’ leases, are most common for consumer leases today.
- The Judge heard that the applicant had taken a lease of the premises.
- If you're trading in a car, make sure the dealer applies the trade-in value to the price your lease is based on.
- Typically, at the end of the lease the money is returned or applied to a purchase price.
- At the end of this month, a one-year lease expired.
- Section 248 assumes that there are some creatures which are pastoral leases which are not exclusive pastoral leases.
- The lease of the premises where the partnership practised was vested in the respondents as trustees for the partnership.
- At first the area was on a pastoral lease granted to Alexander Grant in 1853.
- He recommends negotiating a short-term lease that gives you options to acquire more space as needed.
- Would it have to be a lease in perpetuity?
- So the mining lease which is granted is in the form of a schedule.
- The site is held on a long-term lease at a peppercorn rent from the port.
- They signed a five-year lease with an option to renew for five years, the summary said.
Synonyms leasehold, rental agreement, hire agreement, charter, contract rental, tenancy, tenure, booking period of occupancy, period of occupation
verb liːslis [with object]1Grant (property) on lease; let. 出租(房地产) she leased the site to a local company 她把该场地租给了当地一家公司。 Example sentencesExamples - Through this process, they would buy and lease back an entire building to its existing occupier.
- In May 1887, it was leased to the CPR and construction began in November.
- The land was leased out for the construction of the hotel in 1970.
- The rest consists of vast wilderness concession areas which are leased to private safari camp operators.
- They could lease out the land to their family or someone else, or cultivate it cooperatively with other women.
- The trust then leases its property long-term to farmers who use the land to grow food for the community.
- He said the building could be leased to one large tenant or several smaller tenants.
- Once installed, it will be leased to an operator.
- The devastated land included farms leased to tenants by Vermeer's mother-in-law.
- The city will then lease the track property back to Churchill for $1 a year.
- The remaining 4,000 square feet of space will be available to lease to other tenants, he said.
- Consolidated entitlements are allocated from the National Reserve and cannot be sold or leased for 5 years.
- Many absentee lords leased out their personal lands and the right to collect dues to rich tenant farmers.
Synonyms rent out, rent, let, let out, hire, hire out, sublet, sublease, farm out, charge for the use of - 1.1 Take (property) on lease; rent.
出租(房地产) land was leased from the Duchy of Cornwall 土地是从康沃尔公爵领地上租来的。 Example sentencesExamples - He has temporarily leased offices there until a planned move to Huntington next year.
- Bury Council is leasing the building to the Fusiliers at a peppercorn rent and will be providing an annual funding grant of 30,000.
- Most try to lease or rent their fleets to cut risk and expense.
- Police said the unit is leased from a private landlord who lives outside the area and is currently liaising with officers.
- He said it was too early to say what other retailers would lease space.
- Our flat, above the camel market, was leased from Signora, an old Italian lady who lived downstairs.
- There are also programs to help decide whether to rent or lease instead of own.
- This is the type to use if you are renting or leasing, as the paper can be easily removed when you leave.
- This year we'll see smaller businesses using telematics services in the cars or trucks that they lease or rent.
- Keep in mind that most all-in-one office suites can be leased on a month-to-month basis.
- The area was first leased from the local community in 1941 by a Dutch investor, who planted coffee.
- The bank owns some of the properties it occupies and leases others, and it is unclear whether it will rent or buy the Glasgow property.
- The Lease or Buy Calculator is a tool designed to help in deciding whether to lease or buy business equipment.
- Either way those who currently lease the garages will lose their coveted parking spaces.
- Two years ago a further 35 acres were leased from the Dean and Chapter of Salisbury cathedral.
- It has to repackage network capacity leased from established carriers.
- It was leased from them by the Herbert family in the sixteenth century.
- It must be a physical good that you have bought and not hired / leased etc.
- It's a facility we leased from the government, so at some point we had to give it back.
- The van is leased from City of York Council, which is in partnership with the association and is committed to using clean fuel.
Synonyms rent, hire, charter, engage, take, borrow, pay for the use of
PhrasesA substantially improved prospect of life or use after rejuvenation or repair. 充满生气的新的生活阶段,(修复后)重新使用阶段 the transplant would give Claire a new lease of life Example sentencesExamples - ‘It's a satisfying and fulfilling experience - working with the physically and mentally challenged to give them a new lease of life, help them become independent and enable them to lead normal lives,’ she says.
- For engineers who might wonder what happened to that great product they designed years ago, there is now a process by which it can be resurrected and given a new lease of life.
- The Committee has been re-formed and given a new lease on life following more than two years of inactivity.
- That's how the art form can gain a new lease of life.
- New audio drama and old-time radio dramas find a new lease of life on the Internet.
- ‘Digital restoration, in fact, gives a new lease of life to priceless old documents on palm leaf, parchment or paper, many even 2,000 years or more in age,’ he says.
- A University of Leicester study could help to provide a new lease of life for patients who have suffered a stroke.
- While Australian researchers believe more than one gene is involved, they agree that this will help give the cheap and effective drug a new lease of life.
- This popular event at the Grad House, along with other unique aspects of the atmosphere-soaked hangout, stand to gain a new lease on life.
- The National Culture Fund - set up to facilitate private and public sector funding into heritage - is all set to get a new lease of life.
Derivativesadjective As used herein, gross leasable square footage includes interior alterations and modifications that increase the leasable square footage of the building. Example sentencesExamples - In terms of use authorization, coal is treated as a leasable mineral whether it is on Public Domain or acquired lands, and all coal leases are sold by competitive, sealed bid.
- We hope that our leasable call center will become one of the most helpful customer service tools for enterprises.
- A lifecycle profitability tool is provided to determine the lifecycle profitability of a leasable asset.
- By 1948, there was still no settlement of the best system for issuing of leases for leasable fisheries, but a pragmatic policy was in place that prescribed a number of alternative methods.
noun The leasers said they would discount the rent but shockingly enough it didn't happen. Example sentencesExamples - Our services include sourcing property for clients, and sourcing for buyers or leasers for existing properties.
- Although the company remained in receivership until 1939, some leasers worked on the property.
- The new vehicle leasing market is heating up as leasers offer more options and new car sales decline due to rising interest rates.
- The trend seems to be that captive leasers stick with shorter terms.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French lais, leis, from lesser, laissier 'let, leave', from Latin laxare 'make loose', from laxus 'loose, lax'. Rhymesanis, apiece, Berenice, caprice, cassis, cease, coulisse, crease, Dumfries, fils, fleece, geese, grease, Greece, kris, Lucrece, MacNeice, Matisse, McAleese, Nice, niece, obese, peace, pelisse, police, Rees, Rhys, set piece, sublease, surcease, two-piece, underlease Definition of lease in US English: leasenounlislēs A contract by which one party conveys land, property, services, etc. to another for a specified time, usually in return for a periodic payment. (土地、房产、服务等的)租约 Example sentencesExamples - The lease of the premises where the partnership practised was vested in the respondents as trustees for the partnership.
- If you're trading in a car, make sure the dealer applies the trade-in value to the price your lease is based on.
- He recommends negotiating a short-term lease that gives you options to acquire more space as needed.
- There is an option to renew the lease for a further period when it expires in September of this year.
- The Judge heard that the applicant had taken a lease of the premises.
- Would it have to be a lease in perpetuity?
- The site is held on a long-term lease at a peppercorn rent from the port.
- Section 248 assumes that there are some creatures which are pastoral leases which are not exclusive pastoral leases.
- At the end of this month, a one-year lease expired.
- They signed a five-year lease with an option to renew for five years, the summary said.
- Also, they should know for how long the lease should be and how much they want to pay a month.
- Businesses negotiating commercial leases of property will not want to assume any technical exposure for any uninsured terrorist risk.
- While each transaction has individually tailored lease terms, operating leases typically range 3-12 years in length.
- Read the lease to find out what's been specified in your case and check out rental laws in your area.
- At first the area was on a pastoral lease granted to Alexander Grant in 1853.
- So the mining lease which is granted is in the form of a schedule.
- What happens if one of you decides to terminate the lease on short notice?
- Typically, at the end of the lease the money is returned or applied to a purchase price.
- Closed-end leases, sometimes called ‘walk-away’ leases, are most common for consumer leases today.
- Gross irregularity and corruption in granting the mining lease are involved.
Synonyms leasehold, rental agreement, hire agreement, charter, contract
verblislēs [with object]1Grant (property) on lease; let. 出租(房地产) she leased the site to a local company 她把该场地租给了当地一家公司。 Example sentencesExamples - The rest consists of vast wilderness concession areas which are leased to private safari camp operators.
- Once installed, it will be leased to an operator.
- Through this process, they would buy and lease back an entire building to its existing occupier.
- They could lease out the land to their family or someone else, or cultivate it cooperatively with other women.
- In May 1887, it was leased to the CPR and construction began in November.
- The land was leased out for the construction of the hotel in 1970.
- Many absentee lords leased out their personal lands and the right to collect dues to rich tenant farmers.
- Consolidated entitlements are allocated from the National Reserve and cannot be sold or leased for 5 years.
- The devastated land included farms leased to tenants by Vermeer's mother-in-law.
- He said the building could be leased to one large tenant or several smaller tenants.
- The remaining 4,000 square feet of space will be available to lease to other tenants, he said.
- The city will then lease the track property back to Churchill for $1 a year.
- The trust then leases its property long-term to farmers who use the land to grow food for the community.
Synonyms rent out, rent, let, let out, hire, hire out, sublet, sublease, farm out, charge for the use of - 1.1 Take (property) on lease; rent.
出租(房地产) land was leased from the city 土地是从康沃尔公爵领地上租来的。 Example sentencesExamples - Most try to lease or rent their fleets to cut risk and expense.
- The Lease or Buy Calculator is a tool designed to help in deciding whether to lease or buy business equipment.
- He said it was too early to say what other retailers would lease space.
- Two years ago a further 35 acres were leased from the Dean and Chapter of Salisbury cathedral.
- Bury Council is leasing the building to the Fusiliers at a peppercorn rent and will be providing an annual funding grant of 30,000.
- This is the type to use if you are renting or leasing, as the paper can be easily removed when you leave.
- There are also programs to help decide whether to rent or lease instead of own.
- Police said the unit is leased from a private landlord who lives outside the area and is currently liaising with officers.
- It was leased from them by the Herbert family in the sixteenth century.
- It has to repackage network capacity leased from established carriers.
- He has temporarily leased offices there until a planned move to Huntington next year.
- Keep in mind that most all-in-one office suites can be leased on a month-to-month basis.
- Our flat, above the camel market, was leased from Signora, an old Italian lady who lived downstairs.
- It's a facility we leased from the government, so at some point we had to give it back.
- It must be a physical good that you have bought and not hired / leased etc.
- The area was first leased from the local community in 1941 by a Dutch investor, who planted coffee.
- This year we'll see smaller businesses using telematics services in the cars or trucks that they lease or rent.
- The bank owns some of the properties it occupies and leases others, and it is unclear whether it will rent or buy the Glasgow property.
- The van is leased from City of York Council, which is in partnership with the association and is committed to using clean fuel.
- Either way those who currently lease the garages will lose their coveted parking spaces.
Synonyms rent, hire, charter, engage, take, borrow, pay for the use of
PhrasesA substantially improved prospect of life or use after rejuvenation or repair. 充满生气的新的生活阶段,(修复后)重新使用阶段 Example sentencesExamples - ‘It's a satisfying and fulfilling experience - working with the physically and mentally challenged to give them a new lease of life, help them become independent and enable them to lead normal lives,’ she says.
- New audio drama and old-time radio dramas find a new lease of life on the Internet.
- The Committee has been re-formed and given a new lease on life following more than two years of inactivity.
- This popular event at the Grad House, along with other unique aspects of the atmosphere-soaked hangout, stand to gain a new lease on life.
- The National Culture Fund - set up to facilitate private and public sector funding into heritage - is all set to get a new lease of life.
- For engineers who might wonder what happened to that great product they designed years ago, there is now a process by which it can be resurrected and given a new lease of life.
- While Australian researchers believe more than one gene is involved, they agree that this will help give the cheap and effective drug a new lease of life.
- ‘Digital restoration, in fact, gives a new lease of life to priceless old documents on palm leaf, parchment or paper, many even 2,000 years or more in age,’ he says.
- That's how the art form can gain a new lease of life.
- A University of Leicester study could help to provide a new lease of life for patients who have suffered a stroke.
OriginLate Middle English: from Old French lais, leis, from lesser, laissier ‘let, leave’, from Latin laxare ‘make loose’, from laxus ‘loose, lax’. |