Related Searches
on Ask.com
letting - 4 dictionary results
Rent Property - Ryder Cup
Privately owned houses, apartments & flats available close golf course
www.dunbar2010.com
Privately owned houses, apartments & flats available close golf course
www.dunbar2010.com
let
1 [let]
verb, let, let⋅ting, noun –verb (used with object)
| 1. | to allow or permit: to let him escape. |
| 2. | to allow to pass, go, or come: to let us through. |
| 3. | to grant the occupancy or use of (land, buildings, rooms, space, etc., or movable property) for rent or hire (sometimes fol. by out). |
| 4. | to contract or assign for performance, usually under a contract: to let work to a carpenter. |
| 5. | to cause to; make: to let one know the truth. |
| 6. | (used in the imperative as an auxiliary expressive of a request, command, warning, suggestion, etc.): Let me see. Let us go. Just let them try it! |
–verb (used without object)
| 7. | to admit of being rented or leased: The apartment lets for $100 per week. |
–noun
—Verb phrases| 8. | British. a lease. |
| 9. | let down,
|
| 10. | let in,
|
| 11. | let off,
|
| 12. | let on,
|
| 13. | let out,
|
| 14. | let up,
|
| 15. | let up on, to treat less severely; be more lenient with: He refused to let up on the boy until his grades improved. |
| 16. | let alone. alone (def. 8). |
| 17. | let be,
|
| 18. | let go. go (def. 82). |
| 19. | let someone have it, Informal. to attack or assault, as by striking, shooting, or rebuking: The gunman threatened to let the teller have it if he didn't move fast. |
Origin:
bef. 900; ME leten, OE lǣtan; c. D laten, G lassen, ON lāta, Goth lētan; akin to Gk lēdeîn to be weary, L lassus tired. See late
bef. 900; ME leten, OE lǣtan; c. D laten, G lassen, ON lāta, Goth lētan; akin to Gk lēdeîn to be weary, L lassus tired. See late

Antonyms:
1. prevent.
1. prevent.
Usage note:
Let us is used in all varieties of speech and writing to introduce a suggestion or a request: Let us consider all the facts before deciding. The contracted form let's occurs mostly in informal speech and writing: Let's go. Let's not think about that right now. Perhaps because let's has come to be felt as a word in its own right rather than as the contraction of let us, it is often followed in informal speech and writing by redundant or appositional pronouns: Let's us plan a picnic. Let's you and I (or me) get together tomorrow. Both Let's you and me and Let's you and I occur in the relaxed speech of educated speakers. The former conforms to the traditional rules of grammar; the latter, nonetheless, occurs more frequently. See also leave 1 .
Let us is used in all varieties of speech and writing to introduce a suggestion or a request: Let us consider all the facts before deciding. The contracted form let's occurs mostly in informal speech and writing: Let's go. Let's not think about that right now. Perhaps because let's has come to be felt as a word in its own right rather than as the contraction of let us, it is often followed in informal speech and writing by redundant or appositional pronouns: Let's us plan a picnic. Let's you and I (or me) get together tomorrow. Both Let's you and me and Let's you and I occur in the relaxed speech of educated speakers. The former conforms to the traditional rules of grammar; the latter, nonetheless, occurs more frequently. See also leave 1 .
let
2 [let]
noun, verb, let⋅ted or let, let⋅ting.–noun
| 1. | (in tennis, badminton, etc.) any play that is voided and must be replayed, esp. a service that hits the net and drops into the proper part of the opponent's court. |
| 2. | Chiefly Law. an impediment or obstacle: to act without let or hindrance. |
–verb (used with object)
| 3. | Archaic. to hinder, prevent, or obstruct. |
Origin:
bef. 900; ME letten (v.), lette (n.; deriv. of the v.), OE lettan (v.), deriv. of læt slow, tardy, late; c. ON letja to hinder
bef. 900; ME letten (v.), lette (n.; deriv. of the v.), OE lettan (v.), deriv. of læt slow, tardy, late; c. ON letja to hinder

Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
Cite This Source
|
Link To letting
let 1 (lět) v. let, let·ting, lets v. tr.
let down
Idiom(s): let aloneNot to mention; much less: "Their ancestors had been dirt poor and never saw royalty, let alone hung around with them" (Garrison Keillor). Idiom(s): let goTo cease to employ; dismiss: had to let 20 workers go. Idiom(s): let off on Informal To cause to diminish, as in pressure; ease up on: Let off on the gas so that we do not exceed the speed limit. Idiom(s): let (one's) hair downTo drop one's reserve or inhibitions. Idiom(s): let (someone) have it Informal
Idiom(s): let (someone) in on
Idiom(s): let up onTo be or become more lenient with: Why don't you let up on the poor child? [Middle English leten, from Old English lǣtan; see lē- in Indo-European roots.] |
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
Copyright © 2009, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.

