- person, who, conveys
- cédant m
English-French legislative terms. 2015.
English-French legislative terms. 2015.
person who conveys a fee — index feoffor Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 … Law dictionary
lease — Any agreement which gives rise to relationship of landlord and tenant (real property) or lessor and lessee (real or personal property). Smith v. Royal Ins. Co., C.C.A.Cal., Ill F.2d 667, 671. A contract for exclusive possession of lands,… … Black's law dictionary
lease — Any agreement which gives rise to relationship of landlord and tenant (real property) or lessor and lessee (real or personal property). Smith v. Royal Ins. Co., C.C.A.Cal., Ill F.2d 667, 671. A contract for exclusive possession of lands,… … Black's law dictionary
lessor — les·sor / le ˌsȯr, le sȯr/ n: a person who conveys the possession of real or personal property under a lease Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. lessor … Law dictionary
feoffor — feof·for / fe fər, fē / n: one who makes a feoffment Merriam Webster’s Dictionary of Law. Merriam Webster. 1996. feoffor … Law dictionary
feoffor — A person who conveys a fee; a person who makes a feoffment; one who gives any corporeal hereditament to another; one who enfeoffs another. See 2 Bl Comm 310 … Ballentine's law dictionary
spy — I. verb (spied; spying) Etymology: Middle English spien, from Anglo French espier, of Germanic origin; akin to Old High German spehōn to spy; akin to Latin specere to look, look at, Greek skeptesthai & skopein to watch, look at, consider Date:… … New Collegiate Dictionary
channeler — noun Date: 1987 a person who conveys thoughts or energy from a source believed to be outside the person s body or conscious mind; specifically one who speaks for nonphysical beings or spirits … New Collegiate Dictionary
putter — North Country (Newcastle) Words a person who conveys coals from the hewer. Putters are commonly young men from sixteen to twenty years old … English dialects glossary
medium — {{11}}medium (adj.) 1660s, average, from MEDIUM (Cf. medium) (n.). The Latin adjective was medius. Meaning intermediate is from 1796. As a size designation from 1711. as a designation of cooked meat, it is attested from 1931, short for medium… … Etymology dictionary
messenger — mes•sen•ger [[t]ˈmɛs ən dʒər[/t]] n. 1) a person who conveys messages or parcels 2) navig. a light line for pulling a heavier line to a ship, pier, etc 3) archaic a herald or forerunner 4) cvb to send by messenger • Etymology: 1175–1225; ME… … From formal English to slang