I. noun
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADJECTIVE
long
▪
The headlong rush by the brewers to switch tenants to long leases is creating misery and hardship.
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Meanwhile the county has revalued its assets to reflect its long lease and the planning consents obtained.
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She bought a long lease on the apartment in quiet and respectable Hahnwald, a leafy and staid suburb of Cologne.
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There were areas of settled peasant proprietorship, of long leases and stable crop-sharing tenures.
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Such accommodation can often be let on a long lease or sold to raise a capital sum.
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The council hope to enter into a long lease with Hearth Housing Association who would refurbish the lodges for tenant occupation.
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Jackson marched in as if he'd taken a long lease on the place.
new
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They may be bottom of the table but their latest signings have given them a new lease of life.
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The new lease is for two years and provides that 50 percent of any gross revenue will go to the Navy.
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Right across Britain they have been given a new lease of life.
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The new lease would require an annual safety inspection of the park before it opens.
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A perennial favourite, the polka dot gets a new lease of life in bold emerald green and brilliant white.
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The political controversy over the Habre affair has been given a new lease of life.
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Washington and Manila will in December begin discussions on a new lease .
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A new lease of life could do me good.
short
▪
Depreciation is to be based on the shorter of the lease term and useful economic life.
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Eventually he took a short lease on a much smaller house in Upper Brook Street.
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Not surprisingly, the shorter the lease , the more severe the prohibition becomes.
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And this is a short lease here - we have to provide for buying something or paying a hell of a lot more rent.
■ NOUN
agreement
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Thousands of pub landlords had been given notices to quit and offered lease agreements with rents widely regarded as excessive.
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To support its claim, Barneys cites certain terms of its lease agreements , including the length.
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The city needs to legally evict the owners before it can enter into another lease agreement .
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Commissioners approved an option and lease agreement with Manchester in June.
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A lease agreement that does not meet the criteria for a capital lease must be classified as an operating lease.
payment
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If the lower cost of funding is reflected in lease payments , leasing can be more attractive for small companies.
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Thus, lease payments for the office will increase by more than $ 90, 000 a year.
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These include future interest rates, variable lease payments , the company's tax position and so on.
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The amount of the asset and liability is equal to the present value of the minimum future lease payments .
■ VERB
buy
▪
She bought a long lease on the apartment in quiet and respectable Hahnwald, a leafy and staid suburb of Cologne.
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Swensson bought the lease on a Richfield gas station in North Park.
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Leaseholders who live in a block which does not qualify will have a new right to buy an extended lease .
grant
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Where the County Court grants a new lease to the tenant it may do so for a period not exceeding 14 years.
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It had the power to grant building leases and fix ground rents.
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So the course which was widely adopted was not to sell up entirely but to grant leases of land wanted for development.
hold
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Apart from the physical aspects, if premises are held on a lease there are legal implications, too.
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Tissington however, did not hold on to his lease for very long.
negotiate
▪
The client still operates from the same premises, having negotiated a new lease at the expiry of the old one.
▪
Yaki, who was instrumental in negotiating the leases as an aide to Rep.
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The few tenants who are searching for short-term leases are now able to negotiate break clauses in leases for new buildings.
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The estate agents negotiated a lease at a rent of £20,000 a year.
renew
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He wanted a guarantee that he could renew the lease on expiry.
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A typical instance where a solicitor is needed is renewing the lease at the end of the tenancy.
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The landlord had not renewed Elgaen's lease , and he couldn't find a favorable north-end location in time.
sign
▪
She is in a position to sign a lease immediately for the rent of a suitable home.
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The last time Cal finished in the Pac-10 cellar was 1989, just before Oregon State signed its seven-year lease .
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We signed a year's lease on this place but it ain't worth the paper it's written on.
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Barneys signed leases under which it paid $ 25 million in annual rent for two years to Isetan.
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They say if we sign the lease , then they will think about negotiating.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
▪
a six-month lease on an apartment
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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For example some leases require the expert to receive submissions or evidence from the parties.
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Secondly, the purchaser will require the surveyor to assess potential liabilities under repairing obligations in the lease and in particular for dilapidations.
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That flexibility might involve the offer of a short-term agreement or a long-term lease with an appropriate break clause.
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The tenant holds under an agreement for a lease .
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Tissington however, did not hold on to his lease for very long.
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Yaki, who was instrumental in negotiating the leases as an aide to Rep.
II. verb
COLLOCATIONS FROM CORPUS
■ ADVERB
back
▪
The 800,000 square foot plant is being leased back to the management team.
out
▪
When lands were leased out , a wide range of people took them up.
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For now, the first phase of one building, with 94 units, is ready for occupancy and virtually leased out .
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Finance houses also lease out capital equipment to firms.
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The next five years saw the site leased out to various tenants, although Knight retained ownership.
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Pamela Churchill had to leave their house which she had to lease out to others to get income from the rent.
■ NOUN
building
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Sun also plans to lease another building and has further options nearby.
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I buy and lease hotels and apartment buildings for the army.
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Fulcrum plans to lease the building .
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The council, which has been leasing the buildings to the college, now wants them back.
equipment
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Finance houses also lease out capital equipment to firms.
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Walker Equipment is a very successful company specializing in the sale and leasing of heavy construction equipment.
land
▪
You might use such money to buy or lease land , and so increase the holding you had inherited.
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Sedona recently leased Forest Service land to dispose of water through irrigation, but it will need more.
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The estate sold or leased much of the land used for down river port activities to the Tyne Improvement Commission.
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If the Giants pay for the cleanup, they will be leasing unimproved land , and the value will be lower.
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Most small landowners like Bhushan have been threatened into leasing their land at an unjust rent.
property
▪
The plaintiff agreed to lease a property to Lunnis, who assigned this equitable lease by way of mortgage.
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The losses typically have been covered by other port revenues, such as money derived from leasing of port property .
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When new occupiers lease these properties , Control Securities will have to absorb a £7m loss in the value of these assets.
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Until leasing prospects improve, property owners should donate the space to nonprofit groups and cultural institutions.
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That process differs substantially from how the City of Tucson usually leases property .
■ VERB
buy
▪
Department of Social Security mobility payments to buy or lease a car.
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The truck can be bought or leased nationwide and Ford hopes to take 1, 000 orders this year.
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You might use such money to buy or lease land, and so increase the holding you had inherited.
▪
I had to buy them and lease them back to him.
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You can decide whether you wish to buy , lease or rent them.
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I buy and lease hotels and apartment buildings for the army.
own
▪
He also owns the Kings' lease , which runs through 2018.
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Many physicians own medical equipment leasing companies.
sell
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The brewers have until November to free up thousands of pubs by selling them or leasing them free of the tie.
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Millions of acres around Arizona were set aside at statehood and must be sold or leased for maximum gain to benefit education.
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These firms also sell or lease capacity on their fiber to Sprint and other long-distance firms.
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
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Internet start-ups are being helped by companies willing to lease them Web servers and space.
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It would work out cheaper overall to lease the computers for the project.
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The aircraft had been leased to a Nigerian airline.
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The building is actually owned by the government -- we're leasing it from them.
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The Cider Press Company leases the machinery and buildings for $1000 a month.
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The company plans to sell or lease its remaining stores to other supermarkets.
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We lease all our computers.
EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS
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A further source of income could be obtained from leasing the considerable shooting and fishing rights that belonged to the farm.
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Councils and housing associations will be allowed to lease or buy empty homes in order to provide accommodation for homeless people.
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He turned the beef holding into a dairy farm and soon began expanding by leasing other dairy farms all over Ireland.
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Lansing and Friedkin were leasing a four-bedroom, 6, 000-square-foot house in the Beverly Hills area, sources say.