"Alkila" is a word in TAGALOG, HILIGAYNON, CEBUANO
alkilá - (H) (Sp. alquilar) Rent, payment
for the lease of a house or shop and the
like; to take on lease, to rent, lease. Pilá
ang alkilá sang baláy mo? What is the rent
for your house? Alkilahán mo lang iníng
baláy sing tagnapúlo ka mángmang ang
búlan. Simply rent this house for ten pesos
a month. Ipaalkilá ko iníng baláy. I will let
this house on lease. Paalkilahá akó sang
ímo baláy. Let me have your house on
lease. Indì akó magalkilá siníng hulút, kay
lakás kamahál. I won’t take this room on
lease, because it is too dear. (cf. hinákay).
alkila
Active Verb: mag-alkila
Passive Verb: alkilain
Definition: 1) rent, hire (noun) 2) to hire, to rent (verb)
Examples: Umalkila ka ng bahay. (Rent a house)
alkila = arkila.
alkitran n mixture of tar and creosote painted on wood to pre-serve it.
v [AN; a1b] apply, make into tar of this sort.
And no wonder; for the new technique of "subliminal projection," as it was called, was intimately associated with mass entertainment, and in the life of civilized human beings massed entertainment now plays a part comparable to that played in the Middle Ages be religion.
WORD SUGGESTIONS
A pious man who had reached the age of 105 suddenly stopped going to synagogue. Alarmed by the old fellow's absence after so many years of faithful attendance the Rabbi went to see him. He found him in excellent health, so the Rabbi asked, "How come after all these years we don't see you at services anymore?"The old man looked around and lowered his voice. "I'll tell you, Rabbi," he whispered. "When I got to be 90, I expected God to take me any day. But then I got to be 95, then 100, then 105. So I figured that God is very busy and must've forgotten about me, and I don't want to remind Him!"
Land bought by a builder or speculator, who erects houses thereon, and then leases por-tions thereof upon an improved ground-rent
Read the complete definitionor FEARM. A house or land, or both, let by lease. Cowell
Read the complete definitionA farm; a rent; a lease; a house or land, or both, taken by indenture or lease. Plowd. 195; Vicat, …
Read the complete definitionIn old Engllsh law. The con-tract of lease or letting; also the rent (or farm) reserved upon a lease of …
Read the complete definitionIn oontraots. The term “goods" Is not so wide as “chattels,” for it applies to Inanimate objects, and does not …
Read the complete definitionThe lord of a manor, or of land; the owner of land or houses which he leases to a tenant …
Read the complete definitionTo allow to be used or occupied for a compensation; to lease; to rent; to hire out; -- often with …
Read the complete definitionpléte - (Sp. flete) Fare, freight, freightage; hire, payment for the lease or hire of; to hire, lease (out), take …
Read the complete definitionTo grant the possession and enjoyment of, for a rent; to lease; as, the owwner of an estate or house …
Read the complete definition