Synonym: charter, employ, engage, lease, let, rent, use. Similar words: third, T-shirt, two-thirds, wire, tire, direct, empire, retire. Meaning: ['haɪə(r)] n. 1. a newly hired employee 2. the act of hiring something or someone. v. 1. engage or hire for work 2. hold under a lease or rental agreement; of goods and services 3. engage for service under a term of contract.
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(91) It will probably work out cheaper to hire a van and move your own things.
(92) Farm labor used to hire themselves out for the summer.
(93) The package includes cycle hire for the duration of your holiday.
(94) Big companies can afford to be picky about who they hire.
(95) Hire someone with experience, someone who knows about real estate.
(96) If you want to go further afield, there are bicycles for hire.
(97) He's a rotten excuse for a lawyer. Why on earth did you hire him?
(98) What does it cost to hire a boat for a week?
(99) Under law, your employer has the right to hire a temporary worker to replace you.
(100) It's cheaper for you to hire a flat when you stay in Europe.
(101) To explore further afield,[http://sentencedict.com/hire.html] bicycle hire is available.
(102) Lending includes credit and hire where applicable.
(103) The unions would hire lawyers to file the briefs.
(104) That company is now looking across the Channel to extend the working life of its hire machines.
(105) State and local governments hire teachers, bus drivers, police, and firefighters.
(106) In the mid-1950s nearly half of all cookers used by consumers were still on hire.
(107) Apply slightly tougher standards for employers who hire temporary foreign workers for specialty jobs in the high-tech industry and elsewhere.
(108) The two of us, maybe some others, are going to hire a boat with an outboard motor and perch rods.
(109) The force has pledged to hire 5,000 more ethnic minority officers by 2009.
(110) If you have not time to acquire such general knowledge in a field then you hire some one who has.
(111) She will give an hour of fashion fun, talking and demonstrating her hat hire service and nearly-new designer fashion business.
(112) Team members might engage in discriminatory practices or hire only friends or relatives.
(113) She believed the best way to keep a company profitable was to hire good people and give them a lot of rein.
(114) For example, in one case, an employer refused to hire a visually impaired applicant for the position of research analyst.
(115) Bicycling: Hire a cycle from the central sports shop which is open every day except Sunday.
(116) Some critics say the prisons should hire more blacks to help curb racial abuse.
(117) He said school districts should reduce teacher paperwork, hire more clerical help and lighten teaching loads to reduce stress.
(118) I even manage to hire a car with the credit card, which seems like a blessing.
(119) Which brings us to another benefit of a Gumbel / Sawyer hire.
(120) Years went by before he could be persuaded to hire an assistant engineer or draughtsman.
More similar words: third, T-shirt, two-thirds, wire, tire, direct, empire, retire, fire up, on fire, admire, retired, require, inspire, director, required, entirely, directly, catch fire, set fire to, retirement, requirement, inquire about, questionnaire, in all directions, direct investment.