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Home Dictionary Name: resources Page: 6land
land 1 : an area of the earth usually inclusive of improvements, bodies of water, and natural or man-made objects and extending indefinitely upward and downward compare air right 2 : an estate, interest, or right in land [ means both surface and mineral rights "California Public Resources Code"] ...
means
means 1 a : something enabling one to achieve a desired end [a of self-defense] b : cause 2 : resources (as income and assets) at one's disposal ...
responsible
responsible 1 a : liable to be called on to answer b : liable to be called to account as the primary cause, motive, or agent c : liable to legal review or in case of fault to penalties 2 : characterized by trustworthiness, integrity, and requisite abilities and resources [awarded the contract to the lowest bidder] 3 : able to choose for oneself between right and wrong 4 : marked by or involving accountability [a office] re·spon·si·bil·i·ty n re·spon·si·ble·ness n re·spon·si·bly adv ...
investing
the act or process of expending resources especially money to achieve rewards...
use
use 1 a : an arrangement in which property is granted to another with the trust and confidence that the grantor or another is entitled to the beneficial enjoyment of it see also trust Statute of Uses in the Important Laws section NOTE: Uses originated in early English law and were the origin of the modern trust. Uses became popular in medieval England, where they were often secretly employed as a method of evading laws (as those prohibiting mortmain) and penalties (as attainder) and to defeat creditors. In response, the Statute of Uses was enacted in 1535. The purpose of the Statute was to execute the use, investing the legal ownership of the property in the cestui que use, or one entitled to the beneficial enjoyment, and abolishing the ownership of the grantee. The Statute did not have blanket application, however. Certain uses, particularly those in which the grantee was not merely a passive holder of the property, were not executed under the Statute. These uses were called trust...
challenging
requiring full use of ones abilities or resources as challenging task...
full scale
using all available resources of actions as a full scale effort to find the perpetrator...
Inexhausted
Not exhausted not emptied not spent not having lost all strength or resources unexhausted...
Inefficient
Not efficient not producing the effect intended or desired or achieiving the effect by unnnecessary and excessive expenditure of resources inefficacious as inefficient means or measures inefficient methods are too expensive...
Inadequate
Not adequate unequal to the purpose insufficient deficient as inadequate resources power conceptions representations etc...
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