Lend in a sentence as a verb

The linked email would lend some credence to those claims.

Inflation might screw lenders, and favor debtors, sure.

Bankers will lend you an umbrella when you don't need it and demand it back when it starts raining.

It's just like all your friends say, it's what you hear all the time: banks only lend you money if you don't need it.--That was me.

The notion of "lending" doesn't really apply to electronic books.

Don't do anything too rash and if you need someone to talk to, myself and most other people would be happy to lend an ear.

I'm tired of people endorsing me for skills they don't actually lend any credibility to.

20 years ago the idea that you couldn't lend a book you own to your friend or loan them the new album you just bought would have seemed insane.

Or you would find that no one is willing to lend money and this would cripple an important part of the financial system.

Remember kids, if you work hard, sacrifice, and have parents with a spare house in Tahoe they can lend you rent-free indefinitely, you too can make it as a programmer.

In my life this has been consistently the case- Bush didn't undo the "you must lend to people who can't repay" regulations of Clinton with the unsurprising result.

Some disciplines -- writing, coding, art, etc. -- simply lend themselves well to conditions of quiet, relative isolation, and to long bouts of individual effort.

Many seem to value the convenience of having their whole library in a small device over the ability to "lend" individual electronic copies.

With copy protection, to mimic "lending" some infrastructure needs to be in place to give someone else access rights to a copy of a book while simultaneously depriving you of your copy.

Decisions like this lend a certain credence to recent studies showing that only the desires of the economic and political elite actually affect policy.

They accomplished it via single-minded politics: Wayne Wheeler would lend the League's support to anyone who was in favor of Prohibition, regardless of their stances on other issues.

The problem is that she helped start a war that killed rather a lot of people, none of whom are now able to lend their voices to the discussion, and those who wish to remember those people are obliged to speak on their behalf.

There's no love affair with bicycles, it's simply a matter of utility.> Of course, the cycle paths lend themselves to sauntering along in summer dresses in a way a death-defying, white-knuckle ride in rush-hour traffic does not.

That monster, custom, who all sense doth eat, Of habits *****, is angel yet in this, That to the use of actions fair and good He likewise gives a frock or livery, That aptly is put on. Refrain to-night; And that shall lend a kind of easiness To the next abstinence: the next more easy; For use almost can change the stamp of nature, And master evn the ***** or throw him out With wondrous potency.

Lend definitions

verb

bestow a quality on; "Her presence lends a certain cachet to the company"; "The music added a lot to the play"; "She brings a special atmosphere to our meetings"; "This adds a light note to the program"

See also: impart bestow contribute bring

verb

give temporarily; let have for a limited time; "I will lend you my car"; "loan me some money"

See also: loan

verb

have certain characteristics of qualities for something; be open or vulnerable to; "This story would lend itself well to serialization on television"; "The current system lends itself to great abuse"