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词汇 example_english_lease
释义

Examples of lease


These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
By no means all leases come under these provisions.
The small farms were amalgamated into large and were then leased to large-scale farmers.
Examples of the uses of leasing have been drawn from the wills of a single parish.
Offices tend to be owned by investors and let on relatively short leases.
The substantial and middling tenants at this time would have held on long leases, typically of 11 or 19 years.
Since individuals can return the land leased with few restrictions, unsustainable practices on leased land are much more likely than on owned land.
Finally, loss of land for contractual reasons (such as fixed-term leases) has a predictably large and significant effect.
However, the new constitution, which was drawn in 1994, allows temporary leases.
The subsistence farmers owned small patches of land, while the commercial farmers primarily leased land from the pastoralists.
Of course, these cultural or physical limitations cannot explain why women did not own more grain fields that they leased to others.
Another piece of property, a hay field, was leased in fixed terms for a money rent of 16 soldi.
Men, unlike women, also leased land from other individuals to work themselves.
The group includes tax farms, royal assessments of revenue potential and trading leases.
When lands were leased out, a wide range of people took them up.
Another dimension of a mobile biography is having been a longstay tourist or having owned or leased a house abroad.
Liberating the market has meant that many of them were obliged to relinquish their leases on other holdings or to sell their small holdings.
Their only way to gain access to land was to contest ownership or leasing agreements.
What is really needed, according to this view, is adequate tenure security in the form of long-term leases and free rental markets.
In this case, a livestock grazing system implies either owning the animals or leasing out grazing rights for other farmers' animals.
Municipal land ownership stipulated high leases for upper class villas, thus compensating the low leases for public housing.
In return settlers were offered long leases on favourable terms.
As an interim measure, some of these rather ramshackle houses and factories were leased to short-term tenants such as rock studios and ethnic restaurants.
There have been elements of randomness and of being ad hoc in the way the government has cancelled these leases.
Furthermore, 79 of 182 unplanted leases have not been cancelled.
Unlike the tax farms, the leases cannot serve as a basis for estimating the full trade of the regions covered.
In the winter dry season, beels are leased out by the government for fishing.
The importance of leasing - an element indirectly linked to social landownership structures - thus highly influenced the average mobility of land on the market.
A first indicator is the terms on which leases were concluded.
The duration of leases normally coincided with that of the whole crop-rotation cycle, more often four years, sometimes three or five years.
Instead, men and women both worked their own land and leased land to others.
She leased out another piece of land, also apparently in fixed terms in kind for a rent of 5 quare of grain.
After 1660 the market slowly declined in size, in part because of a fall in the number of leases recorded.
A few women appointed representatives, acted as official deputies of their husbands or leased land for rents.
He considered that previous leases should be included and that it should extend to the time after the prince became king.
Land was to be "leased out" to the tenants for thirty years.
About 44 per cent had long-term leases of government lands, 20 per cent had unsecured short-term leases and another 10 per cent were squatting.
The legal relationships concerning the physical accommodation range from licensing or leasing through to full ownership of real estate.
The owners of the leases would be individuals, married couples or cohesive communities.
Other whaling sites and sites of leases are not shown.
Many growers are considering selling or leasing their land or leaving cranberry production to pursue other full-time jobs27.
The use of anti-pollarding clauses within leases was strongly supported and examples given of their effectiveness.
The length of leases on state and waqf lands was an issue of concern for muft-s and legal scholars of the day.
Unfortunately, data on 5,000 leases are not available because renters acquired many leases before 1978 via one-time payments for a period of 99 years.
In its turn, the agricultural sector in this area was dominated by leased land, since three-quarters of all agricultural land was leased out for short terms, mainly by large landowners.
The latter could be onerous and include loss of tenure for leased lands - a powerful threat for the weaker, small colonos in particular.
Nonetheless, they acknowledged that distant stretches of land might relinquish their communal status and be converted to enclosed pastures on eighteen-year leases.
The data had also stated that 35,931 tenants had received thirty-year leases to land that was privately endowed.
The coefficient estimates for the acres leased are also as expected.
The original rents for the leases that managers have adjusted are not available.
Because we are holding population fixed within each county, the amount of land leased will be directly correlated with its availability.
Commercial leases, which account for almost one-third of 2003 revenues, generate the greatest amount of revenue.
In the study area, it involves leasing land to a group of individuals living within the same household.
There was also evidence o f g irl g roups appearing p leased with their c ompositions as a g roup product.
In the same year, troops were deployed to guard the leased territory.
The prohibition of leasing of®ces was ®rm and + contrary to that of private sales + unanimously supported by jurists and legal opinion.
Men and women leased land and hired wage labourers.
They were leased to the people in exchange for a tribute of the produce.
Revenue accounts with the different landed proprietors were adjusted and leases confirmed or revoked.
While 115 households had their own land (received land from the government through redistribution), the rest were operating leased land.
As the constitution permits, short-term leases, such as rental and sharecropping, are practiced all over the country in response to land scarcity in all regions.
However, we also demonstrate that waiting would still be valuable for leases with short lives or under cancellation threats.
In the event, land is leased out rather than sold, the lessor has full knowledge on the degradation activities of the lessee.
However, supporters of the privatization policy, argue that privatization would decrease the rate of land degradation occurring on leased land.
The uncertainty of timber prices could be one plausible reason why leaseholders are delaying the planting of their leases.
Waiting would still be valuable even for leases with short lives.
Waiting has value even for leases with short lives.
Another is the threat of cancellation of leases which have not been planted.
Tenant farming was the rule and the farm units suffered from insecurity because of the shortness of leases.
The piece of land sown with rye (segale), valued at 2 lire, was leased in terratico, and provided a rent of 1 staio of rye.
Rural inhabitants commonly leased small plots of land from their neighbours, though share terms were rare.
All of these were leased in fixed terms.
Men, but not women, leased land from others to work themselves.
The settlers established property rights on revenue forestlands by leasing the land from the government.
If, as was often the case, colonos leased land from the sugar companies, their tenure could, moreover, be tied to their supply performance.
Not considered here are small plots, privately owned or leased from the state.
Rents for housing and agricultural leases were lowered, for example, and military expenditures were considerably increased.
Because the duration of many leases is 25 years, the real return is reduced drastically if leases are not adjusted.
British authorities were concerned when details of the leases and registrations became known.
The amount of land leased was also different from that adver tised.
In 1992, almost 34,000 acres of new public lands were leased to the private sector, and 13,000 acres were sold.
When it comes to leases and concessions, the government retains ownership of the assets and the private investor operates them.
Specifically, firms that participated in the government leasing program could make profits, but were not liable for any losses.
Local government owns the market stalls and leases them to traders.
A significant, if varied, proportion of farming families within each local community did not own the land they cultivated, but leased it as tenants.
However, leasing can be a good alternative for a customer to approach this new and widely unknown robot technology with less commitment.
Largely as a result, leasing became widespread, in contrast with the earlier prevalence of sales.
The fourth item is similar to item three but this is revenue earned by agent i on leased land.
Due to a high percentage of leased land, classical forms of land consolidation based on change of ownership become increasingly less suitable for the farmers.
Only short period leases are permitted while land cannot be used as collateral for credit.
Agriculture is the main source of income, either in the form of wage income, or from cultivation of owned or leased land.
In particular, it is recommended that legal property rights be provided to small farmers and that the government phase out leasing arrangements.
In other cases, the designated managers were themselves involved in leasing out land in ways that were inconsistent with their duties.
Allardyce pioneered the strict administrative regime with licenses and leases that prevented the industry from expanding out of control.
The last of the leases permiting grazing of livestock in that area was revoked in 1972.
He may be in charge of short-term transfer rights (leasing out), but he usually then has no right to the rent.
In particular, many commercial and residential leases are for less than one acre and larger lots generally pay significantly lower rents per acre.
Almost 80% of the land cultivated in pineapple is leased, through fixed-rent or sharecropping contracts.
These examples are from corpora and from sources on the web. Any opinions in the examples do not represent the opinion of the Cambridge Dictionary editors or of Cambridge University Press or its licensors.
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