Similar words: hire, hireling, sapphire, hire purchase, aired, tired, fired, haired. Meaning: ['haɪə(r)] adj. 1. having services engaged for a fee 2. hired for the exclusive temporary use of a group of travelers.
Random good picture Not show
121. Honest with the church elders who hired him, he told them that his family is his first ministry.
122. Others have hired government relations consultants to help them build communication links with the Government and Whitehall.
123. Brown was hired to lead a cattle drive north to the Canadian border.
124. Another guy I knew really did threaten to have his personal enemies killed by hired gunmen after the war.
125. He has done exactly what he was hired to do.
126. When she was hired, she was near the end of a ten-year treatment of tuberculosis.
127. He would need a hired watcher for that, or a camera operated by remote control.
128. My father got hired and fired a lot, usually en masse with entire coaching staffs.
129. The passenger wagons were not going into town for another half hour, so I hired a carriage and went in myself.
130. Hired plant invoices may create a slight problem where the hire period extends across two accounting periods.
131. He knew what the girl was when he hired her, the bald-faced hypocrite!
132. Disney hired him when he was 21 as a writer, based on a short film he had made as a student.
133. Annie hired a new manager, William A.. Banks, who booked her in a number of state fairs.
134. After being fired for giving food to the poor, the one-eyed Notburga was hired as a farmhand.
135. Producer Elmo Williams hired veteran pilot Jack Canary as a technical advisor and put him in charge of assembling the film's air force.
136. Under the contingency fee agreement, the private lawyers hired by the state would be paid only if they win the case.
137. In April of 1974, Tarrytown management hired a consultant to work with supervisors and workers in joint problem solving programs.
138. Caterers can be hired to serve food you have made and to do the cleanup afterward.
139. A hired hand who worked miracles and shared what little he had with those few who were less fortunate.
140. Even students in art history and philosophy are getting hired by management consultants, Sanborn said.
141. All the shopkeepers there have chipped in and hired a promo agency to drum up Christmas trade.
142. Accordingly, they hired more telephone representatives to relieve the pressure on employees charged with handling customer complaints and inquiries.
143. Early in the setup of the Northwest Respirator Center he hired Dunning to work as his part-time associate director.
144. Of the first 11 apprentices to graduate from its program, Serigraph hired 9.
144. Sentencedict.com is a online sentence dictionary, on which you can find good sentences for a large number of words.
145. It also opened a concierge desk selling tickets to area events and hired a tour coordinator fluent in five languages.
146. A new security system was installed. In addition, extra guards were hired.
147. Both the entrance hall and the grand banqueting room on the first floor can be hired.
148. He is often hired to inform Fleet Street about client views or, less charitably, to dish the dirt on opponents.
149. They've hired a firm of solicitors and an investigator to gather evidence.
150. The bankrupt cattle barons dismissed thousands of hired hands, who were forced to find new careers.
More similar words: hire, hireling, sapphire, hire purchase, aired, tired, fired, haired, admired, retired, desired, tired of, required, impaired, acquired, fire door, inspired, tiredness, fire drill, be tired of, fire damage, fire department, required reserves, whir, whirr, whirl, chirp, shirk, third, shirt.