Did you mean: helps?
Heaps - Law Dictionary Search Results
Denshiring of land
land (otherwise called burn-beating), a method of improving land by casting parings of earth, turf, and stubble into heaps, which when dried are burned into ashes for a compost, Jac. Law Dict.
Meya
Meya, a mow or heap of corn, Blount, Ten. 130.
Landmark
boundary of land any mark or fixed object as a marked tree a stone a ditch or a heap of stones by which the limits of a farm a town or other portion of territory may be
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Institutes of Lord Coke
Common Pleas, temp. Edward IV. This comment is a rich mine of valuable Common Law learning, collected and heaped together from the ancient reports and year-books, but greatly defective in method. It is usually cited by the
False pretence, obtaining property
a good title to them, whereas a person guilty of larceny by trick can pass no such title, Heap v. Motor Advisory Agency, Ltd., (1922) 1 KB 282 (583); Folkes v. King, (1922) 1 KB. The distinction
Barrow
Barrow [fr. beorg, Sax., a heap of earth], a large mound used as a sepulchre, found in many parts of England.
Accumulation
Accumulation, a gathering together, heaping up, or amassing. The dominion over property, and its rents, issues, and profits, is restrained by our law
Scree
A pebble a stone also a heap of stones or rocky deacutebris
Pyre
A funeral pile a combustible heap on which the dead are burned hence any pile to be burnt
Piling
The act of heaping up
- ‹ Prev
- 1
- 2
- 4
- 5
- Next ›
- Last »
Try the research workspace - 7 days free
Did you mean: helps?
Heaps - Law Dictionary Search Results
Denshiring of land
land (otherwise called burn-beating), a method of improving land by casting parings of earth, turf, and stubble into heaps, which when dried are burned into ashes for a compost, Jac. Law Dict.
Meya
Meya, a mow or heap of corn, Blount, Ten. 130.
Landmark
boundary of land any mark or fixed object as a marked tree a stone a ditch or a heap of stones by which the limits of a farm a town or other portion of territory may be
Keep your definitions linked to case research
Institutes of Lord Coke
Common Pleas, temp. Edward IV. This comment is a rich mine of valuable Common Law learning, collected and heaped together from the ancient reports and year-books, but greatly defective in method. It is usually cited by the
False pretence, obtaining property
a good title to them, whereas a person guilty of larceny by trick can pass no such title, Heap v. Motor Advisory Agency, Ltd., (1922) 1 KB 282 (583); Folkes v. King, (1922) 1 KB. The distinction
Barrow
Barrow [fr. beorg, Sax., a heap of earth], a large mound used as a sepulchre, found in many parts of England.
Accumulation
Accumulation, a gathering together, heaping up, or amassing. The dominion over property, and its rents, issues, and profits, is restrained by our law
Scree
A pebble a stone also a heap of stones or rocky deacutebris
Pyre
A funeral pile a combustible heap on which the dead are burned hence any pile to be burnt
Piling
The act of heaping up
- ‹ Prev
- 1
- 2
- 4
- 5
- Next ›
- Last »
Try the research workspace - 7 days free