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 lent [lent]   添加此单词到默认生词本
lend的过去式和过去分词



    lent
    [ noun ]
    a period of 40 weekdays from Ash Wednesday to Holy Saturday
    <noun.time>


    Lend \Lend\ (l[e^]nd), v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Lent} (l[e^]nt); p.
    pr. & vb. n. {Lending}.] [OE. lenen, AS. l[=ae]nan, fr.
    l[=ae]n loan; akin to G. lehnen to lend. See {Loan}.]
    1. To allow the custody and use of, on condition of the
    return of the same; to grant the temporary use of; as, to
    lend a book; -- opposed to {borrow}.

    Give me that ring.
    I'll lend it thee, my dear, but have no power
    To give it from me. --Shak.

    2. To allow the possession and use of, on condition of the
    return of an equivalent in kind; as, to lend money or some
    article of food.

    Thou shalt not give him thy money upon usury, nor
    lend him thy victuals for increase. --Levit. xxv.
    37.

    3. To afford; to grant or furnish in general; as, to lend
    assistance; to lend one's name or influence.

    Cato, lend me for a while thy patience. --Addison.

    Mountain lines and distant horizons lend space and
    largeness to his compositions. --J. A.
    Symonds.

    4. To let for hire or compensation; as, to lend a horse or
    gig.

    Note: This use of the word is rare in the United States,
    except with reference to money.

    {To lend a hand}, to give assistance; to help. [Colloq.]

    {To lend one's ears} or {To lend an ear}, to give attention.


    Lent \Lent\ (l[e^]nt),
    imp. & p. p. of {Lend}.


    Lent \Lent\, n. [OE. lente, lenten, leynte, AS. lengten,
    lencten, spring, lent, akin to D. lente, OHG. lenzin, langiz,
    G. lenz, and perh. fr. AS. lang long, E. long, because at
    this season of the year the days lengthen.] (Eccl.)
    A fast of forty days, beginning with Ash Wednesday and
    continuing till Easter, observed by some Christian churches
    as commemorative of the fast of our Savior.

    {Lent lily} (Bot.), the daffodil; -- so named from its
    blossoming in spring.


    Lent \Lent\, a. [L. lentus; akin to lenis soft, mild: cf. F.
    lent. See {Lenient}.]
    1. Slow; mild; gentle; as, lenter heats. [Obs.] --B. Jonson.

    2. (Mus.) See {Lento}.

    1. During the past two or three years, I have lent my eldest son a lot of money to help with his business.
    2. As previously reported, Chapman and Troon agreed in March to a restructuring plan in which Troon lent $6.5 million to Chapman.
    3. Guarantees on Iraqi debt could cost the governments of the West, Japan and the Soviet Union tens of billions of dollars. Some international banks, meanwhile, could lose billions of dollars lent to Kuwait's banks.
    4. The same banks had outstanding loans of less than Dollars 300m lent to customers inside Russia. By this June, all Russian banks held about Dollars 15.5bn abroad, according to central bank figures.
    5. The first $4 billion should be disbursed next month, with a further $600 million to be lent by the end of the year, and the rest next year.
    6. Money from this fund is lent first to the government of Pakistan and then passed on to the project in a back-to-back transaction to get round the constraint on private sector lending by the bank. That also helped reduce the need for outside equity.
    7. This figure fell to Pounds 37.9bn last November. Including debt extended to the construction industry, the total lent to the property sector is Pounds 53.4bn. Bank Finance in the Property Sector: Debt Mountain or Mirage?
    8. That lent credibility to solutions he proposed, he said.
    9. Foreign companies attracted to Ireland by low corporate taxes use transfer pricing to generate profits which are lent on to more highly taxed subsidiaries elsewhere.
    10. The REA, part of the Agriculture Department, has lent billions of dollars to rural electric cooperatives.
    11. One branch of Superior Training Services, an Indianapolis-based career-school chain, showed $24 million in defaults, or 44% of the money lent to its students, in a state governments' study.
    12. Banks lent for specific property developments and were not given information on how much had been borrowed elsewhere for other projects. In the week following the first alert, Mr Kent and Mr Crow kept in constant touch.
    13. It depended on the evidence. The lenders ought to have presented their claim on the basis that, if the valuer had advised properly, they would not have lent the money.
    14. Beyond that, it has lent its support to legal efforts by Delvalle's representatives here to freeze Panamanian assets in the United States.
    15. A further $150 million in bank loans, the last slice of a $1.95 billion bank loan agreed on last year and linked to those IMF loans, also probably won't be lent now, compounding Argentina's payments difficulties.
    16. The Catholics graciously lent their cathedral for the ceremony because it was bigger.
    17. It lent righteousness to their belief that they are South Africa's chosen race.
    18. Japanese newspapers say Sanwa Shinkin lent 10 billion yen ($72.3 million) to a private-school operator who used the money for stock market speculation.
    19. Israel has rejected the PLO's demands. However, Mr Karolos Papoulias, the Greek foreign minister, who is touring the Middle East representing the European Union, lent his support to the demands during a visit to Amman.
    20. Chemical Bank has lent $4.5 million to Third World nations, Brazil among them.
    21. The deputy prime minister was forced to resign last year after it became clear he had lent a government office in Seville to a businessman brother who then used his connection to win himself several business deals.
    22. The source familiar with the negotiations said the major banks' contributions toward the $60 million will be porportionate to the amount they previously lent, with Citicorp and Bankers Trust making up around two-thirds of the new loan.
    23. Last year it lent money to 79 of them from Algeria to Zimbabwe.
    24. Last week Credit Lyonnais lent about $145 million to Pathe Communications, provided that a bankruptcy suit brought by creditors against the MGM studio is dismissed.
    25. Brazil then would probably lose a large part of the $15 billion of short-term credits lent to it by international banks and companies, which it uses to finance exports and provide liquidity to its banking system.
    26. But new money lent by banks goes largely to pay interest on old debt.
    27. "I think," observed a Soviet teacher who recently returned from her first trip to the West, "he is more popular abroad than he is at home." Two polls released Sunday lent support to that assertion.
    28. The bank also said that it took in $1.2 billion more than it lent to the world's 15 most indebted countries.
    29. Iraq's new economic alliance with North Yemen, Egypt and Jordan _ all of whom lent men and materiel to Baghdad's war effort _ may prove the first indication of how Saddam will fare as a pan-Arab leader.
    30. Cornfeld, whose mutual fund empire collapsed spectacularly two decades ago, is hoping to buy MGM from Credit Lyonnais, the French bank which lent the studio far too much money in the 1980s.
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