释义 |
Definition of lodger in English: lodgernoun ˈlɒdʒəˈlɑdʒər British A person who rents accommodation in another person's house. to help pay the bills she began to take in lodgers Example sentencesExamples - Women earned money by washing, sewing, and taking in lodgers.
- It's your space so you can decide what sort of lodger you want - young student, mature student, employee, male, female.
- Though they received a portion of their husband's salaries, sailors' wives still had to rely on various types of work such as making supplies or packing goods for the Company, or taking in lodgers.
- In fact, these are often the best type of lodger because they go home at weekends!
- There were examples of mothers who iced cakes, kept chickens, and (as with the women graduates) took in laundry and lodgers to help with finance.
- They have another lodger, Nemo, who is a mysterious figure: a law-writer by trade, but a self-destructive opium addict by nature.
- Another early lodger was the American physicist Don Page.
- These lodgers, however, did not know about Gregor.
- She wants to move another lodger in effectively relegating me to one final room in the house, my bedroom.
- Eventually it becomes clear to him that Sarah has simultaneously been carrying on a flirtation with another lodger.
- The maid realised that there was a good chance that she could be face to face with the room's lodger.
- The more downbeat and slight Lloyd, meanwhile, is the family's lodger, who, while a trifle dozy, at least brings some money into the house courtesy of his job at a local factory.
- She also plans to get another lodger in (like we're not too cramped already) which means turfing me and my computer out of the spare room and cramming everything I own into one room.
- After that, things began to change, and some of our lodgers left us to resume their former lives or to begin new ones elsewhere.
- The couple were held to be living apart: their relationship was that of a landlady and lodger only.
- Vicky's lodger, Henry, helps her efforts as she struggles to present a new stream-lined version of herself to a handsome book buyer.
- Amy had soon rallied up all of the lodgers at Anne's boarding home.
- Jane Bennet and Charles Bingley, the new lodger at Netherfield, fall for each other.
- Some of the early ledgers show the changing post-war society by denoting whether someone is a house-owner, lodger or servant.
- She does not like the movie her mother's lodger (and her own frustrated suitor) has, in a fit of petty spite, given her mother and her free tickets to see.
Synonyms boarder, paying guest, PG, guest, tenant, resident, inmate North American roomer Definition of lodger in US English: lodgernounˈlɑdʒərˈläjər British A roomer. to help pay the bills she began to take in lodgers Example sentencesExamples - Amy had soon rallied up all of the lodgers at Anne's boarding home.
- There were examples of mothers who iced cakes, kept chickens, and (as with the women graduates) took in laundry and lodgers to help with finance.
- They have another lodger, Nemo, who is a mysterious figure: a law-writer by trade, but a self-destructive opium addict by nature.
- Though they received a portion of their husband's salaries, sailors' wives still had to rely on various types of work such as making supplies or packing goods for the Company, or taking in lodgers.
- The maid realised that there was a good chance that she could be face to face with the room's lodger.
- Eventually it becomes clear to him that Sarah has simultaneously been carrying on a flirtation with another lodger.
- Women earned money by washing, sewing, and taking in lodgers.
- The couple were held to be living apart: their relationship was that of a landlady and lodger only.
- The more downbeat and slight Lloyd, meanwhile, is the family's lodger, who, while a trifle dozy, at least brings some money into the house courtesy of his job at a local factory.
- Another early lodger was the American physicist Don Page.
- Some of the early ledgers show the changing post-war society by denoting whether someone is a house-owner, lodger or servant.
- These lodgers, however, did not know about Gregor.
- It's your space so you can decide what sort of lodger you want - young student, mature student, employee, male, female.
- In fact, these are often the best type of lodger because they go home at weekends!
- After that, things began to change, and some of our lodgers left us to resume their former lives or to begin new ones elsewhere.
- Vicky's lodger, Henry, helps her efforts as she struggles to present a new stream-lined version of herself to a handsome book buyer.
- She wants to move another lodger in effectively relegating me to one final room in the house, my bedroom.
- She also plans to get another lodger in (like we're not too cramped already) which means turfing me and my computer out of the spare room and cramming everything I own into one room.
- Jane Bennet and Charles Bingley, the new lodger at Netherfield, fall for each other.
- She does not like the movie her mother's lodger (and her own frustrated suitor) has, in a fit of petty spite, given her mother and her free tickets to see.
Synonyms boarder, paying guest, pg, guest, tenant, resident, inmate |