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[ UK /fˈiː/ ]
[ US /ˈfi/ ]
VERB
  1. give a tip or gratuity to in return for a service, beyond the compensation agreed on
    fee the steward
    Remember to tip the waiter
NOUN
  1. a fixed charge for a privilege or for professional services
  2. an interest in land capable of being inherited

How To Use fee In A Sentence

  • Added to which there is a large increase in the fees receivable in 1994 to a level of almost £123,000 which accounts for the large increase in the gross profit over the previous and subsequent years.
  • Jeff, clad in board trunks and a T-shirt, leans back in his chair with the lappie on his, uhhh, lap, and his bare feet up on the desk. Savages
  • Elisabeth found herself with a straggle of colonists in a mosquito-ridden, uncleared jungle where sandflies bored into the skin of the feet and the clay soil was so intractable that nothing would grow.
  • WorldCom promises not to impose a minimum call charge and no set up or monthly rental fee.
  • The resettlement fee shall be calculated according to the number of agricultural population to be resettled.
  • I used to think the worst feeling was losing someone you love. But, I was wrong. The worst feeling is the moment you have lost yourself.
  • I walked out of the theatre feeling a little odd, as I often do when I have been deeply immersed in a film.
  • Leaving London they went to Paris, where they passed a few days, but soon grew weary of the place; and Lord Chetwynde, feeling a kind of languor, which seemed to him like a premonition of disease, he decided to go to Germany. The Cryptogram A Novel
  • It was of a suitable Ash Wednesday character and left the congregation feeling sober and a little cast down.
  • Try feeling a little "schlubby" popping around the corner for a newspaper. Wine Shopping in San Francisco, Italian Style
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