Lease in a sentence as a noun

What about a 3-year lease with more square footage and a higher rent?

Call it a lease, call it a service, but stop scamming consumers.

So it's not like they don't do DRM...In regards to pre-lease, A bit of a stretch calling what Valve does DRM.

I own my own servers and lease a full rack and I serve roughly 1 billion page impressions per month.

I sign a lease on an apartment in the new city and my wife and I pack up our apartment.

>But it should be noted that Steam's pre-release anti-piracy has no yet been broken.

She was violating her lease and deserves everything that happened to her.

An annual lease on a machine of this type is usually about a fifth of its purchase cost, so let's be generous and call it $70,000 per year.

Lease in a sentence as a verb

If your landlord was interested in running a tenement home/boarding house/hotel, they wouldn't sign you into a year-long lease.

We all know he signed that lease specifically to run a pseudo-hotel business under the guise of an Airbnb profile.

Yet they would be paying $7200 for the year, as opposed to $6600 for the year before--a $600 increase--because this time there was no free month for signing the lease.

Normal leases are financed by banks with the car as collateral at the end of three years; this allows the bank to take the risk of much lower principal repayments over the first 36 months.

In this case, however, the inflows to the fund come not from personal income taxes but from taxes and lease-revenue on the state's natural resources, notably oil and gas.

After doldrums and threats, which I will discuss briefly below, I was let go, without notice, stuck with a six-month lease in location with a hyper-inflated real estate economy.> As an engineer, your job is to build things that solve > problems.

""Well, the lease on the house me and 3 other adults split the rent on is up in 2 years, and because of my money issues I don't know if I can afford to stay living close to my son after that, I may have to move out of state to a cheaper area, I'm seriously considering the Detroit area since the cost of living is low.

Lease definitions

noun

property that is leased or rented out or let

See also: rental letting

noun

a contract granting use or occupation of property during a specified time for a specified payment

noun

the period of time during which a contract conveying property to a person is in effect

verb

let for money; "We rented our apartment to friends while we were abroad"

See also: rent

verb

hold under a lease or rental agreement; of goods and services

See also: rent hire charter

verb

grant use or occupation of under a term of contract; "I am leasing my country estate to some foreigners"

See also: rent

verb

engage for service under a term of contract; "We took an apartment on a quiet street"; "Let's rent a car"; "Shall we take a guide in Rome?"

See also: rent hire charter engage take