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land |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Financial, Idioms, Encyclopedia, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.06 sec. |
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land n. real property, real estate (and all that grows thereon), and the right to minerals underneath and the airspace over it. It may include improvements like buildings, but not necessarily. The owner of the land may give a long-term (like 99 years) lease to another with the right to build on it. The improvement is a "leasehold" for ownership of the right to use--without ownership of--the underlying land. The right to use the air above a parcel of land is subject to height limitations by local ordinance, state or federal law. (See: real property, real estate) land noun property, real estate, seisin, terrain, tract Associated concepts: abutting land, adjacent land, agreeeent to sell land, alienation of land, appurtenance to land, common lands, condemnation of land, contiguous land, contract of sale of land, convey an interest in land, covenants running with the land, easement, easement running with the land, equitable interest in land, high land, immrovements upon land, interest in land, land contract, land grant, land tax, lease of land, lien on land, raw land, right of way, subdivision of land, suit to recover land, survey of land, title in land, title in fee, trespass on land tract, undiiided land, unimproved land, vacant land, waste lands See also: alight, circuit, curtilage, demesne, domain, estate, fee, freehold, holding, immovable, parcel, premises, property, real estate, realm, realty, region, territory LAND. This term comprehends any found, soil or earth whatsoever, as meadows,
pastures, woods, waters, marshes, furze and heath. It has an indefinite
extent upwards as well as downwards; therefore land, legally includes all
houses and other buildings standing or built on it; and whatever is in a
direct line between the surface and the centre of the earth, such as mines
of metals and fossils. 1 Inst. 4 a; Wood's Inst. 120; 2 B1. Com. 18; 1
Cruise on Real Prop. 58. In a more confined sense, the word land is said to
denote "frank tenement at the least." Shep. To. 92. In this sense, then,
leaseholds cannot be said to be included under the word lands. 8 Madd. Rep.
635. The technical sense of the word land is farther explained by Sheppard,
in his Touch. p. 88, thus: "if one be seised of some lands in fee, and
possessed of other lands for years, all in one parish, and he grant all his
lands in that parish (without naming them) in fee simple or for life; by
this grant shall pass no, more but the lands he hath in fee simple." It is
also said that land in its legal acceptation means arable land. 11 Co. 55 a.
See also Cro. Car. 293; 2 P. Wms. 458, n.; 5 Ves. 476; 20 Vin. Ab. 203.
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This acquisition threatens to attenuate Julius's relationship to place, as he enters John's cash economy after having lived off the land. Being honest men--or at least prudent, aware that if recaptured they would likely be executed--the soldiers instead retreated to a remote White Mountain pond, where they lived off the land until after the war. They built sod houses (see photo above) on the prairie and lived off the land. |
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