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    Lodg·er
    /ˈläjər/

    noun

    • 1. a roomer: British "to help pay the bills she began to take in lodgers"
  2. A lodger is a person who occupies a rented room in another's house, with no property, interest, or possession therein. See synonyms, examples, word history, and legal definition of lodger.

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  4. A lodger is someone who pays for a place to sleep, and usually for meals, in someone else's house. Learn more about the word, its synonyms, related words, and usage examples from the Cambridge English Corpus.

  5. A lodger is a person who pays rent in return for accommodation in someone else's house. Learn the origin, synonyms and usage of the word lodger with examples from literature and media.

  6. If you rent out a room in your house, guess what? You'll have a lodger living with you. As opposed to a renter, who rents an entire apartment or house, a lodger generally leases only a bedroom, sharing the use of the kitchen and bathroom with the house's other inhabitants.

  7. A lodger is someone who pays for a place to sleep, and usually for meals, in someone else's house. Learn more about the meaning, usage and pronunciation of lodger, and see related words and phrases in English and other languages.

  8. A lodger is a person who pays rent to live in someone else's house or room. Find out more about the word's origin, usage, and related terms in this comprehensive online dictionary.

  9. noun. /ˈlɒdʒə (r)/ /ˈlɑːdʒər/ (especially British English) a person who pays rent to live in somebodys house. She’s started taking in lodgers. Many people take in a lodger because they need the income. Topics Houses and homes c2. Questions about grammar and vocabulary?

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