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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Rentable

Rentable \Rent"a*ble\ (-?-b'l), a. Capable of being rented, or suitable for renting.

Wiktionary
rentable

a. Suitable for, or capable of being, rented.

WordNet
rentable

adj. that is able or fit be rented [ant: unrentable]

Usage examples of "rentable".

That association has already taken the first step in advanced housing, and reduced the cost of safe and rentable city shelter to its lowest terms.

Any space was rentable, not only bedrooms to girls for turning tricks, kitchen to dealers cutting up their shit, but closets for stashing quantities in transit, corridors and couches for slumping against.

They went out onto the street and headed for the Assembly Halls, a commercial building devoted to a score of rentable halls ranging from a large auditorium to small lecture rooms that would hold audiences of fifty or so.

In conclusion, it may be said that the present volume contains many precious relics of the Bewick, Newbury, Goldsmith, Newcastle York, Banbury, Coventry, and Catnach presses, and a representative collection of the stock of workable woodcuts of a provincial printer in the latter part of the 18th century, and to those who would like to inspect the rentable copies of those valuable and interesting little books, and some of the original Horn Books, etc.

Our rentable property is three ramshackle cabins on the alley at the rear of the lot, for which we get four dollars a month each, when we can collect it.

Really, as part landlords, you should be looking into the condition of your rentable property.

Reach were busier than ever, nobles visiting for the masque and the rumored naming of the heir tucked into every available room and rentable house.

Apparently it was rentable at a hefty fee between the hours of eight and noon each morning, for the use of discerning gentlemen who preferred to train in private, then open to the general public for the remainder of the day.

He recognized the car as one rentable at the agency in Nairobi, which meant the driver was a European, the generic term in the colony for any white.

In conclusion, it may be said that the present volume contains many precious relics of the Bewick, Newbury, Goldsmith, Newcastle York, Banbury, Coventry, and Catnach presses, and a representative collection of the stock of workable woodcuts of a provincial printer in the latter part of the 18th century, and to those who would like to inspect the rentable copies of those valuable and interesting little books, and some of the original Horn Books, etc.