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Plough - Law Dictionary Search Results

Waste

tenant pulls down a house or a part thereof, or ploughs up ancient meadow, and (b) permissive or omissive, as where

Arable land

Dictionary 'arable land' is 'land which is capable of being ploughed or fit for village'. In the context of s. 17(1)

Rent

may also consist in services or manual operations, as to plough so many acres of ground and the like; which services,

Jugum terr'

Jugum terr', a yoke or land, containing half a plough-land, Co. Litt. 5 a.

Knight's fee

Knight's fee [feodum militare, Lat.], twelve plough-lands, the value of which was 20l. per annum (2 Inst.

Lyef-yeld, or lef-silver

by a customary tenant to his lord, for leave to plough or sow.

Nomine poena

landlord being done by the tenant, as if he should plough up pasture. The (English) Agricultural Holdings Act, 1923 (1 &

Vegetables

Added Tax Act, 2002, s. 2(34)] Means a barrow, sledge, plough, drag and any wheeled or tracked conveyance of any description

Sharping corn

parts of England give to their smith for sharpening their plough-irons, harrowtines, etc., Blount.

Socage, or Soccage

the soc; and soc is the same thing as a plough. Co. Litt. 86. In Scotland, a type of agricultural holding

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