α. late Middle English– lessee, 1600s lesse.
β. 1500s–1600s leassee, 1600s– leasee (now nonstandard).
单词 | lessee |
释义 | lesseen.α. late Middle English– lessee, 1600s lesse. β. 1500s–1600s leassee, 1600s– leasee (now nonstandard). A person who leases something, esp. land or a property, from another; a person to whom a lease is granted; a tenant under a lease. Cf. lessor n. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal right > right of possession or ownership > tenure of property > one who has tenure > [noun] > leaseholder or tenant kindly tenanta1325 tenant1377 mailer1392 farmer1414 renter1444 takerc1450 fee-farmer1468 lessee1495 mail-man?a1500 tacksman1533 land-tenant1543 rentaller1553 fermerera1572 tenementer1574 mail-payer1597 inholdera1599 feu-farmer1609 leaseholder1858 leaser1877 1495 Rolls of Parl.: Henry VII (Electronic ed.) Parl. Oct. 1495 §49. m. 29 Lessees..[shall] fynde goode and suffycient suertie. 1533–4 Act 25 Henry VIII c. 8 §4 in Statutes of Realm (1963) III. 443 The lesses..shall defalke abate and reteyne..asmoche of the rentis dewe to the lessours as they can prove to have expended on the same pavyng. 1587 W. Harrison Hist. Descr. Iland Brit. (new ed.) ii. xii. 189/2 in Holinshed's Chron. (new ed.) I If the leassee be thought to be worth an hundred pounds. 1614 W. B. tr. Philosophers Banquet (ed. 2) iv. i. 260 The Lesse most leaudly the rent did retaine. 1683 J. Pettus Ess. Metallick Words at Bone, in Fleta Minor ii The Leasees of our Society did work the Mines of Consumlock and Talibont. 1721 in Public Rec. Colony of Connecticut (1872) VI. 253 Any disagreement that may happen..amongst..lessees..concern'd in the mines aforesaid. 1768 W. Blackstone Comm. Laws Eng. III. 200 The lessee had no other remedy against the ejector but in damages. 1817 W. Selwyn Abridgem. Law Nisi Prius (ed. 4) II. 1209 If executrix of lessee for years of a rectory take husband, the husband and wife may [etc.]. 1884 E. Yates Recoll. & Experiences I. v. 187 The lessee..placed my name on his free list, and for years I went to his theatre once or twice a week. 1911 D. M. Barringer & J. S. Adams Law Mines & Mining in U.S. II. iii. 158 A lessee for oil and gas purposes..was bound to render to the lessor one-fourth of the product. 1999 BBC Top Gear Mag. Aug. 134/3 They'd..inform the lessee that..the car would have to be repossessed. 2007 Publican 23 Apr. 49/1 The industry is dominated by small businesses—freetraders, lessees and tenants—with limited resources, in terms of both time and money. Derivatives leˈsseeship n. the condition or position of a lessee. ΘΚΠ society > law > legal right > right of possession or ownership > tenure of property > [noun] > leasehold tenure tack1423 farmage?1529 tenancy1590 leasehold1720 lesseeship1812 tenantry1846 tenantship1883 1812 F. L. Holt in Examiner 28 Dec. 831/2 That lesseeship was worth nothing. 1884 E. Yates Recoll. & Experiences I. v. 186 Mr. E. T. Smith..in his time entered on theatrical lesseeship on a large and varied scale. 1993 Theatre Jrnl. 45 492 Sara's succession to lesseeship after Sam's death. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, June 2018; most recently modified version published online March 2022). < |
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