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单词 feeing
释义

fee

1 of 2

noun

ˈfē How to pronounce fee (audio)
1
a(1)
: an estate in land held in feudal law from a lord on condition of homage and service
(2)
: a piece of land so held
b
: an inherited or heritable estate in land
2
a
: a fixed charge
b
: a sum paid or charged for a service

fee

2 of 2

verb

feed; feeing

transitive verb

1
chiefly Scotland : hire
2
: tip entry 9 sense 1
Phrases
in fee
: in absolute and legal possession

Synonyms

Noun

  • ante
  • charge
  • cost
  • damage
  • figure
  • freight
  • price
  • price tag

Verb

  • assume
  • employ
  • engage
  • hire
  • lay on [chiefly British]
  • pay
  • place
  • recruit
  • retain
  • sign (up or on)
  • take on
See all Synonyms & Antonyms

Example Sentences

Noun The admission fee is $10. a credit card with no annual fee The tuition fees went up this year. We returned the library book late and had to pay a late fee. His insurance covers the doctor's fee. They paid a fortune in legal fees. Verb the townspeople fee country lasses as housemaids, nurses, and cooks See More
Recent Examples on the Web
Noun
At one point, Vanderbilt slashed his fee for transporting cattle across New York state to a paltry $1 a head. Dennis Drabelle, Washington Post, 16 Sep. 2022 The authority board voted unanimously to approve a change in the contract with SmithGroup to increase its fee by $382,000 to cover the additional work added with the plaza's building, The Node's bridge and other new features. Tom Daykin, Journal Sentinel, 16 Sep. 2022 Fixing broken glass on an iPhone, for example, will cost you $29 in addition to your monthly subscription fee. Scharon Harding, Ars Technica, 8 Sep. 2022 Greer declined to be paid for his months of difficult work, even after Hanzman tried to cover a portion of his fee. Patricia Mazzei, BostonGlobe.com, 3 Sep. 2022 In 2023, its annual fee to the National Football League will double to about $2 billion, The Wall Street Journal previously reported. Joe Flint, WSJ, 26 Aug. 2022 Entering its last year of a five-year contract with Republic Services, Olmsted Falls is raising its 2023 residential solid waste collection fee by 3 percent. John Benson, cleveland, 24 Aug. 2022 His fee begins at $25,000 and clients also cover the costs of printing, a graphic designer, and any additional fees. Adrienne Gaffney, Town & Country, 19 Aug. 2022 Disney+ is hiking its monthly fee to $11 in December, for an increase of $3, and subscribers who want to keep paying the current price of $8 a month will have to watch ads. Ryan Faughnder, Los Angeles Times, 16 Aug. 2022 See More

Word History

Etymology

Noun

Middle English, from Anglo-French fé, fief, of Germanic origin; akin to Old English feoh cattle, property, Old High German fihu cattle; akin to Latin pecus cattle, pecunia money

First Known Use

Noun

14th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1a(1)

Verb

15th century, in the meaning defined at sense 1

Kids Definition

fee

noun

ˈfē How to pronounce fee (audio)
1
: an amount of money that must be paid
A fee is charged to get into the park.
2
: a charge for services
a doctor's fee

Legal Definition

fee

noun

1
: an inheritable freehold estate in real property
especially : fee simple compare leasehold, life estate at estate
absolute fee
: a fee granted with no restrictions or limitations on alienability : fee simple absolute at fee simple
conditional fee
: a fee that is subject to a condition: as
a : fee simple conditional at fee simple
b : fee simple on condition subsequent at fee simple
defeasible fee
: a fee that is subject to terminating or being terminated
determinable fee
: a defeasible fee that terminates automatically upon the occurrence of a specified event : fee simple determinable at fee simple
fee patent
: a fee simple absolute that is granted by a patent from the U.S. government
also : a patent that grants a fee simple absolute
the land shall have the same status as though such fee patent had never been issued U.S. Code

Note: Allotments of parcels of land in reservations are held in private ownership by fee patents.

fee tail
: a fee which is granted to an individual and to that individual's descendants, which is subject to a reversion or a remainder if a tenant in tail dies with no lineal descendants, and which is not freely alienable see also entail entry 1, De Donis Conditionalibus compare fee simple conditional at fee simple

Note: The fee tail developed out of the fee simple conditional as a means to ensure that property would remain intact and in the family. Instead of giving the grantee a fee simple absolute once he or she has a child, which the grantee could then alienate (as by selling), the fee tail creates a future interest in the descendants which prevents the grantee and the descendants from alienating the property. A fee tail is created by a conveyance to the grantee and to the heirs of the grantee's body. In most jurisdictions, the fee tail is not recognized.

2
: a fixed amount or percentage charged
especially : a sum paid or charged for a service
attorney fees
contingency fee
: a fee for the services of a lawyer paid upon successful completion of the services and usually calculated as a percentage of the gain obtained for the client

called also contingency, contingent fee

compare champerty, maintenance
filing fee
: a fee charged for the filing of a document

Note: Filing fees are ordinarily charged in civil matters with the filing of the complaint.

jury fee
: a fee that is assessed in some courts as part of the cost of a civil jury trial
origination fee
: a fee charged by a lender for the preparation and processing of a loan

History and Etymology for fee

Middle English, fief, from Old French , fief, ultimately from a Germanic word akin to Old High German fehu cattle

feeing

verb

present participle of fee, chiefly Scottish
as in employing
to provide with a paying job the townspeople fee country lasses as housemaids, nurses, and cooks

Synonyms & Similar Words

Relevance
  • employing
  • hiring
  • recruiting
  • paying
  • engaging
  • retaining
  • assuming
  • placing
  • enlisting
  • laying on
  • taking on
  • contracting
  • reengaging
  • jobbing
  • promoting
  • signing (up or on)
  • reemploying
  • re-engaging
  • partnering
  • rehiring
  • apprenticing
  • subcontracting
  • scouting
  • re-employing
  • advancing
  • upgrading
  • headhunting
  • keeping (on)

Antonyms & Near Antonyms

  • discharging
  • firing
  • dismissing
  • sacking
  • canning
  • laying off
  • axing
  • locking out
  • furloughing
See More
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更新时间:2024/9/21 14:50:12