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live in
/ 濒瑟惫 /
verb
- (of an employee, as in a hospital or hotel) to dwell at one's place of employment
adjective
- living in the place at which one works
a live-in maid
- living with someone else in that person's home
a live-in lover
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of live-in1
Example Sentences
When the desperately depressed 19-year-old college dropout, Hai, meets the 82-year-old Grazina, he becomes her live-in caregiver.
And even today there are still pages of classified adverts for livery workers and other assorted varieties of domestic help but the demand now is more for live-in carers for the elderly than butlers or nannies.
It鈥檚 designed as a carriage house, and the story is Madame Leota has taken it over as a live-in space.
鈥淭he fires were devastating for so many people, many who鈥檝e lost their homes and family members. But there were also secondary effects 鈥 gardeners, house cleaners, healthcare workers, restaurant workers, all who have lost their jobs, live-in childcare workers who have lost both their homes and their jobs, all at once,鈥 said Councilmember Hugo Soto-Mart铆nez, whose district includes Hollywood, Westlake and Echo Park.
A new survey from Bankrate.com found that 40% of adults in the U.S. with a live-in partner are committing or have committed financial infidelity.
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