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hire
[ hahyuhr ]
verb (used with object)
- to engage the services of (someone) for wages or other payment:
The company hired three new engineers in the last quarter.
Synonyms: employ
- to engage the temporary use of at a set price; rent:
We hired a limousine to get us to the wedding in style.
Synonyms: lease
noun
- the act of hiring.
- the state or condition of being hired.
- the price or compensation paid or contracted to be paid for the temporary use of something or for personal services or labor; pay:
The laborer is worthy of his hire.
Synonyms: remuneration, salary, wages, stipend, rental
- Informal. a person hired or to be hired:
Most of our new hires are college-educated.
adjective
- British. available for hire; rental:
a hire car.
verb phrase
- to offer or exchange one's services for payment:
He hired himself out as a handyman.
- to obtain employment; take a job:
They hired on as wranglers with the rodeo.
hire
/ ˈhaɪə /
verb
- to acquire the temporary use of (a thing) or the services of (a person) in exchange for payment
- to employ (a person) for wages
- often foll by out to provide (something) or the services of (oneself or others) for an agreed payment, usually for an agreed period
- trfoll byout to pay independent contractors for (work to be done)
noun
- the act of hiring or the state of being hired
- ( as modifier )
a hire car
- the price paid or payable for a person's services or the temporary use of something
- ( as modifier )
the hire charge
- for hire or on hireavailable for service or temporary use in exchange for payment
Derived Forms
- ˈhirable, adjective
- ˈhirer, noun
Other Words From
- hir·ee [hahy, uh, r-, ee], noun
- hir·er noun
- out·hire verb (used with object) outhired outhiring
- pre·hir·ing adjective
- re·hire verb rehired rehiring noun
- un·hired adjective
Word History and Origins
Origin of hire1
Word History and Origins
Origin of hire1
Idioms and Phrases
- for hire, available for use or service in exchange for payment. Also on hire.
Synonym Study
Example Sentences
He was hired on a one-year contract as a direct ministerial appointment, meaning the usual civil service recruitment procedures didn't have to be followed.
As a counterpoint, when Paul makes the same boast to the hiring manager at the local tannery, she circles “unskilled labor.”
Under H-2A, agricultural employers can hire workers from other countries on temporary permits, so long as they demonstrate an inability to find a sufficient number of available U.S. workers.
They are trained and hired through the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation’s Conservation Fire Camps Program.
As Trump unveils tariff plans, many companies are now facing lower profit margins, while holding off on investments and hiring as they try to figure out what the future will look like.
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Definitions and idiom definitions from Dictionary.com Unabridged, based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2023
Idioms from The American Heritage® Idioms Dictionary copyright © 2002, 2001, 1995 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
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