Inheritable+property
11Laird — A Laird (Lord) is a hereditary title for the owner of a landed estate in Scotland. The title of Laird may carry certain local or feudal rights, though unlike a Lordship, a Lairdship has never carried voting rights, either in the historic… …
12Claude Ropartz — Claude Ropartz, médecin, a été de nombreuses années Directeur du Centre Départemental de Transfusion Sanguine de Rouen. Dans ce Centre il a travaillé avec son équipe sur la structure, l allotypie, l isotypie et l idiotypie des immunoglobulines.… …
13hereditament — n. Inheritable property …
14heritable bond — A bond secured by inheritable property; that is, by land …
15profectitus — (Civil law.) Inheritable property …
16infeft — inˈfeft transitive verb (infeft also infefted ; infeft also infefted ; infefting ; infefts) Etymology: Middle English (Scots dial). infeften, alteration of enfeffen to enfeoff more at enfeoff Scots law : to invest with or give symbolical… …
17fee — n [Middle English, fief, from Old French fé fief, ultimately from a Germanic word akin to Old High German fehu cattle] 1: an inheritable freehold estate in real property; esp: fee simple compare leasehold; life estate at estate …
18fee simple — fee sim·ple n pl fees simple [simple without limitation (as to heirs) and unrestricted (as to transfer of ownership)]: a fee that is alienable (as by deed, will, or intestacy) and of potentially indefinite duration; esp: fee simple absolute in… …
19Denmark — /den mahrk/, n. a kingdom in N Europe, on the Jutland peninsula and adjacent islands. 5,268,775; 16,576 sq. mi. (42,930 sq. km). Cap.: Copenhagen. * * * Denmark Introduction Denmark Background: Once the seat of Viking raiders and later a major… …
20fee — feeless, adj. /fee/, n., v., feed, feeing. n. 1. a charge or payment for professional services: a doctor s fee. 2. a sum paid or charged for a privilege: an admission fee. 3. a charge allowed by law for the service of a public officer. 4. Law. a …