What is the meaning of PROPERTY. Phrases containing PROPERTY
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Acronyms & AI meanings
Pipeline Compressor Research Council
Antigua And Barbuda
American Federation of Film Producers
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Florida Association of School Boards
Golf Club Beograd
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Forsyth Dental Center
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Occupational Health and Safety Association
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a.
Not interested; not having any interest or property in; having nothing at stake; as, to be uninterested in any business.
n.
The property or aggregate properties of a thing by which it is rendered useful or desirable, or the degree of such property or sum of properties; worth; excellence; utility; importance.
n.
An estate devised or granted in confidence that the devisee or grantee shall convey it, or dispose of the profits, at the will, or for the benefit, of another; an estate held for the use of another; a confidence respecting property reposed in one person, who is termed the trustee, for the benefit of another, who is called the cestui que trust.
v. t.
To commit (property) to the care of a trustee; as, to trustee an estate.
n.
A person to whom property is legally committed in trust, to be applied either for the benefit of specified individuals, or for public uses; one who is intrusted with property for the benefit of another; also, a person in whose hands the effects of another are attached in a trustee process.
n.
In Shetland and Orkney, a freehold; property held by udal, or allodial, right.
n.
Enjoyment of property; use.
n.
A volatile liquid hydrocarbon, C5H6, related to ethylene and acetylene, but possessing the property of unsaturation in the third degree. It is the only known member of a distinct series of compounds. It has a garlic odor.
a.
Held in trust; as, trust property; trustmoney.
a.
That which is proper to anything; a peculiar quality of a thing; that which is inherent in a subject, or naturally essential to it; an attribute; as, sweetness is a property of sugar.
a.
Set up; fixed; determined; -- used chiefly or only in the phrase upset price; that is, the price fixed upon as the minimum for property offered in a public sale, or, in an auction, the price at which property is set up or started by the auctioneer, and the lowest price at which it will be sold.
v. t.
To attach (a debtor's wages, credits, or property in the hands of a third person) in the interest of the creditor.
n.
An association, society, guild, or corporation, esp. one capable of having and acquiring property.
n.
In the Shetland and Orkney Islands, one who holds property by udal, or allodial, right.
v. t.
To make a property of; to appropriate.
a.
Free from pecuniary difficulties or encumbrances; as, he and his property are unembarrassed.
a.
That to which a person has a legal title, whether in his possession or not; thing owned; an estate, whether in lands, goods, or money; as, a man of large property, or small property.
n.
Credit given; especially, delivery of property or merchandise in reliance upon future payment; exchange without immediate receipt of an equivalent; as, to sell or buy goods on trust.
n.
The acquisition of the title or right to property by the uninterrupted possession of it for a certain term prescribed by law; -- the same as prescription in common law.
n.
A person who has the use of property and reaps the profits of it.
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