to live at the place where you work or study
Genius software designers in California didn't live in places like San Leandro in East Oakland.
Hotels... Hotels were bound to have lots of live-in jobs, weren't they?
I as a woman mean to fight and win: let the men live in slavery if they will.
I do actually live in the house with my parents, whether they realize it or not.
I should have guessed already he was married, or had a live-in girlfriend.
Marta hurried down Front Street to the house, wondering if the live-in maid was home.
My first thought was to wonder about the live-in relationship he'd mentioned.
She recalled that nasty little Kipper fellow saying he wanted his own wife to live in some far-flung godforsaken village.
Their nanny lives in.
lives in
living in
lived in
There is no origin for this phrasal verb
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