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 hire [haiә]   添加此单词到默认生词本
n. 租金, 租用, 雇用

vt. 雇请, 出租

vi. 受雇

[经] 租用, 雇用, 租金




    hire


    Hire \Hire\ (h[~e]r), pron. [Obs.]
    See {Here}, pron. --Chaucer.


    Hire \Hire\ (h[imac]r), n. [OE. hire, hure, AS. h[=y]r; akin to
    D. huur, G. heuer, Dan. hyre, Sw. hyra.]
    1. The price, reward, or compensation paid, or contracted to
    be paid, for the temporary use of a thing or a place, for
    personal service, or for labor; wages; rent; pay.

    The laborer is worthy of his hire. --Luke x. 7.

    2. (Law.) A bailment by which the use of a thing, or the
    services and labor of a person, are contracted for at a
    certain price or reward. --Story.

    Syn: Wages; salary; stipend; allowance; pay.


    Hire \Hire\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Hired} (h[imac]rd); p. pr. &
    vb. n. {Hiring}.] [OE. hiren, huren, AS. h[=y]rian; akin to
    D. huren, G. heuern, Dan. hyre, Sw. hyra. See {Hire}, n.]
    1. To procure (any chattel or estate) from another person,
    for temporary use, for a compensation or equivalent; to
    purchase the use or enjoyment of for a limited time; as,
    to hire a farm for a year; to hire money.

    2. To engage or purchase the service, labor, or interest of
    (any one) for a specific purpose, by payment of wages; as,
    to hire a servant, an agent, or an advocate.

    3. To grant the temporary use of, for compensation; to engage
    to give the service of, for a price; to let; to lease; --
    now usually with out, and often reflexively; as, he has
    hired out his horse, or his time.

    They . . . have hired out themselves for bread. --1
    Sam. ii. 5.

    1. To hire these people, employers are offered a subsidy amounting to Pounds 2,340 per year, which falls far short of the Pounds 8,000 that the average unemployed person costs the taxpayer.
    2. If managers of the federal offices decide to hire temps strictly on price, the bigger firms could offer big discounts to win market share and squeeze out the smaller independent operators, says Mr. Kushell, the franchise consultant.
    3. "If the project was so compelling, they wouldn't have had to hire investment bankers." Mr. Picchi also notes that Mobil, Chevron and Petro-Canada themselves don't have the wherewithal to pour more money into Hibernia.
    4. Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. is requiring bidders for its retail brokerage to promise they won't hire any of the unit's 1,100 brokers for one year if a deal falls through, Wall Street sources said.
    5. They are now a critical mass, exerting power and influence throughout corporate life and tending to hire even more MBAs. Noting the need and the interest, the nation's universities are doing their best to maintain a supply.
    6. Problems resurfaced in July when Hollis decided to hire a new executive director and several board members said they felt the full board should have voted on the post.
    7. Although he refused to say whether he would hire Malek in a Bush administration, the vice president expressed confidence in him.
    8. Senior Hutton officials say that Mr. Fomon insisted that Hutton hire some of his lady friends, and Mr. Fomon concedes that he hired five or six young women at Hutton.
    9. The unfinished details included company demands for a longer work week at the same pay and an extension of company rights to hire temporary workers, Masters said.
    10. The average short-term trailer fleet was 14 per cent ahead, with utilisation maintained at 83 per cent. The size of the contract hire fleet, which contributes 40 per cent of revenue, had been maintained.
    11. But he says, he wouldn't hire Col. North.
    12. "The United States is the easiest country in the world to hire and fire people," he said.
    13. On Tuesday, Mrs. Nickell's daughter, Cindy Hamilton, testified that her mother discussed copying the Tylenol episodes in the Chicago area and also asked how to hire a hit man and where she could buy heroin.
    14. Yesterday, company executives reiterated to Dow Jones Professional Investor Report that they haven't "been considering the sale of the company" and "didn't hire Morgan Stanley to sell the company."
    15. The plant, which will begin operating by the end of 1989, will hire about 155 employees, the spokesman said.
    16. Airlines, either individually or in groups, hire other companies to provide personnel who screen baggage and passengers at airport checkpoints.
    17. Although Ford is expected to hire 1,300 additional workers to handle the minivan's assembly, Nissan said production of the parts wouldn't lead to significant new hiring at its plant in Smyrna, Tenn.
    18. They soon had to hire back clerical workers.
    19. Despite the government ban, firms that hire foreign manual workers are not penalized.
    20. Overtures from Japanese manufacturers are expected to be listened to with increasing interest. Such has been the decline in hire rates in the UK that Acriss says it is now as cheap to rent a new car as to buy.
    21. In a related development, Scrimgeour Vickers & Co. said it agreed to hire at least eight equities specialists from Greenwell Montagu Securities, the Midland Bank PLC unit that ceased making markets in British stocks yesterday.
    22. President Bush has asked Congress to appropriate $19.5 million to hire 300 new FBI agents as part of his anti-crime package.
    23. He plans to hire about 15 journalists, while relying heavily on material from the PA. 'Some people at least buy the Standard because there is nothing else to buy,' he argued.
    24. A law passed last year lets government labs hire foreigners.
    25. "There's an enormous fear about spiraling health-insurance costs, and employers don't want to hire people who may get sick and not be able to perform," she says.
    26. Drexel agrees to hire a "special reviewer" acceptable to the SEC to review its investment company operations.
    27. OPEC may have to hire private guards.
    28. Employers, many of whom are initially skeptical of the program, have four months to evaluate candidates on the job without a commitment to hire them permanently.
    29. Sony Corp.'s effort to hire Peter Guber as chairman of Columbia Pictures Entertainment Inc. hangs on some complex legal negotiations this week aimed at disentangling the Hollywood producer from a five-year contract with Warner Communications Inc.
    30. He thought not: 'It can cost as much to hire a period-instrument orchestra as it does one of the better provincial full-scale symphony orchestras.
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