Someone's landlord is the man who allows them to live or work in a building which he owns, in return for rent. His landlord doubled the rent
Also known as "lessor" The owner of a property who allows other persons to occupy a property in exchange for periodic payments of rent
{i} one who owns and leases real estate; landowner who leases to others, leaser, renter; one who owns or operates of an inn or rooming house; owner of an estate
A person who agrees to allow another person to live in the premise A landlord can have a representative who acts on his/her behalf
The landlord of a pub is the man who owns or runs it, or the husband of the woman who owns or runs it. The landlord refused to serve him because he considered him too drunk
a person who rents or leases a premises he/she owns to another party Landlords of residential premises typically own an apartment building, condominium, townhouse or house
The lessor or the owner of leased premises The landlord retains a reversionary interest in the property, so that when the lease ends the property will revert to the landlord (See lease, lessor, lessee) Landlord-Tenant Law Overview
Owner of real property who rents or leases the property to a second party (tenant)
The person who owns a superior right in a property Often incorrectly referred to as the freeholder, a landlord can be an intermediate lessee who pays rent to a superior lessor (perhaps the freeholder) and collects rent from a lessee