tenant: [14] A tenant is etymologically a ‘holder’. The word comes from Old French tenant, a noun use of the present participle of tenir ‘hold’. This in turn went back to Latin tenēre ‘hold’, a descendant of the Indo-European base *ten- ‘stretch, extend’ (source also of English tend, tense, thin, etc). Also from Latin tenēre come English tenacious [16], tenement [14], tenet [17], and tenor, not to mention contain, continue, detain, maintain, obtain, retain, etc, while French tenir has additionally produced tenable [16], tenon [15], tenure [15], and probably tennis. => contain, continue, detain, maintain, obtain, retain, tenable, tenacious, tend, tenement, tenet, tennis, tenon, tenor, tense, tenure, thin
tenant (n.)
early 14c., "person who holds lands by title or by lease," from Anglo-French tenaunt (late 13c.), Old French tenant "possessor; feudal tenant" (12c.), noun use of present participle of tenir "to hold," from Latin tenere "hold, keep, grasp" (see tenet). Related: Tenancy. Tenant-farmer attested from 1748.
例文
1. If you are a council tenant call the housing department about it.
市建住宅テナントはこの問題について住宅部に電話してください。
2.Landowners frequently left the management of their estates to tenant farmers.
地主たちはよく土地の管理を小作農に任せている。
3.Mowing lawns and taking out the trash are jobs for the tenant .
芝生を刈り取り、ゴミを捨てるのは宿泊客のやるべきことだ。/
4.The tenant was dispossessed for not paying his rent.