0 past simple and past participle of lease --
1 to make a legal agreement by which money is paid in order to use land, a building, a vehicle, or a piece of equipment for an agreed period of time: --
[ + two objects ] It was agreed they would lease the apartment to him/lease him the apartment.
The building's 60 units are currently leased to students of the university.
While 115 households had their own land (received land from the government through redistribution), the rest were operating leased land.
They were leased to the people in exchange for a tribute of the produce.
Men and women leased land and hired wage labourers.
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.
The subsistence farmers owned small patches of land, while the commercial farmers primarily leased land from the pastoralists.
Another dimension of a mobile biography is having been a longstay tourist or having owned or leased a house abroad.
With the exception of leased-out parcels, it corresponds to the land-basis of the agricultural production unit.