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Possessions

A Wisdom Archive on Possessions

Possessions

A selection of articles related to Possessions

We recommend this article: Possessions - 1, and also this: Possessions - 2.
possessions, Possession, Possession - Control, Possession - Importance of possession, Possession - Intention to possess, Possession - Obtaining possession, Possession - Possession acquired by consent, Possession - Possession acquired without consent

ARTICLES RELATED TO Possessions

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Father - Categories

Father - Biological child possesses male parent's genes. Natural father - the most common category: child product of man and woman Surprise father - where the men did not know that there was a child until possibly years afterwards Posthumous father - father died before children were born (or even conceived) Teenage father/youthful father - may be associated with premarital sexual intercourse Non-parental father - unmarried father whose name does not appear on child's birt ...

See also:

Father, Father - Categories, Father - Biological child possesses male parent's genes, Father - Non-biological social / legal relationship between father and child, Father - Fatherhood defined by contact level with child, Father - Legally fatherless children, Father - Terminology, Father - Religion, Father - Philosophical fatherhood

Read more here: » Father: Encyclopedia II - Father - Categories

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Administrator of the Government - Permanent Administrators

The term Administrator is also used for a permanent officer representing HM where the status of the territory is not sufficient to warrant the appointment of a Governor (only common for a colony or state under the British crown), and also for representatives of a Governor (almost like a Lieutenant-Governor). Examples of such territorial administrations, by Realm: Administrator of the Government - United Kingdom overseas possessions. Sovereign Base Areas in Cyprus, since the 16 August 1960 Treaty of E ...

See also:

Administrator of the Government, Administrator of the Government - Temporary Administrators, Administrator of the Government - Canada, Administrator of the Government - Australia, Administrator of the Government - New Zealand, Administrator of the Government - Hong Kong, Administrator of the Government - Rhodesia, Administrator of the Government - Permanent Administrators, Administrator of the Government - United Kingdom overseas possessions, Administrator of the Government - Dominions, Administrator of the Government - Sources and References

Read more here: » Administrator of the Government: Encyclopedia II - Administrator of the Government - Permanent Administrators

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Omission of the negative verb

When a negative sentence is formed, the main verb goes into the imperative mood and gives all of its inflections to the negative verb ei, e.g. tuemme → emme tue. Usually the word mitään ("anything") and an expletive is added to the sentence. This means that even if the negative verb ei is left out, the meaning is indicated by this context. For example: Ei se mitään osaa. "He doesn't know ...

See also:

Spoken Finnish, Spoken Finnish - Introduction, Spoken Finnish - Pronunciation, Spoken Finnish - Personal pronouns, Spoken Finnish - Numerals, Spoken Finnish - Verbs, Spoken Finnish - Questions, Spoken Finnish - Possessive suffix, Spoken Finnish - Omission of the negative verb, Spoken Finnish - Important regional variations

Read more here: » Spoken Finnish: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Omission of the negative verb

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Spanish determiners - Demonstrative determiners

Spanish has three levels of demonstrative pronouns (see deixis): Closest to the speaker (proximal): este, esta, estos, estas Closest to the hearer (distal): ese, esa, esos, esas Far from both (distal): aquel, aquella, aquellos, aquellas English also used to have a three-way system like this: "this hill (here)", "that hill (there)" or "yon hill (yonder)" — in Spanish, "esta colina", "esa colina", "aquella colina". English lost the third level, so ...

See also:

Spanish determiners, Spanish determiners - Demonstrative determiners, Spanish determiners - Articles, Spanish determiners - Definite articles, Spanish determiners - Indefinite articles, Spanish determiners - Possessive determiners, Spanish determiners - Combining demonstratives and possessives, Spanish determiners - Miscellaneous determiners

Read more here: » Spanish determiners: Encyclopedia II - Spanish determiners - Demonstrative determiners

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Spanish determiners - Articles

Spanish determiners - Definite articles. The definite article in Spanish, corresponding to "the", is el. It agrees for gender and number as follows: el hombre = "[the] man" los hombres = "[the] men" la mujer = "[the] woman" las mujeres = "[the] women" The usually masculine form el is used instead of la before feminine nouns beginning with a stressed a sound: el águila (pequeña) el agua (fresca)< ...

See also:

Spanish determiners, Spanish determiners - Demonstrative determiners, Spanish determiners - Articles, Spanish determiners - Definite articles, Spanish determiners - Indefinite articles, Spanish determiners - Possessive determiners, Spanish determiners - Combining demonstratives and possessives, Spanish determiners - Miscellaneous determiners

Read more here: » Spanish determiners: Encyclopedia II - Spanish determiners - Articles

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Numerals

Numerals 1-10 in colloquial spoken Finnish: yks (yksi) kaks (kaksi) kolme / kol neljä / nel viis (viisi) kuus (kuusi) seittemä(n) (seitsemän) kaheksa(n) (kahdeksan) yheksä(n) (yhdeksän) kymmene(n) If one is forced to count fast then even shorter forms are used: yy kaa koo nee vii kuu sei / see < ...

See also:

Spoken Finnish, Spoken Finnish - Introduction, Spoken Finnish - Pronunciation, Spoken Finnish - Personal pronouns, Spoken Finnish - Numerals, Spoken Finnish - Verbs, Spoken Finnish - Questions, Spoken Finnish - Possessive suffix, Spoken Finnish - Omission of the negative verb, Spoken Finnish - Important regional variations

Read more here: » Spoken Finnish: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Numerals

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Irish morphology - Pronouns

Irish morphology - Personal pronouns. Personal pronouns in Irish do not inflect for case, but there are three different sets of pronouns used: conjunctive forms, disjunctive forms, and emphatic forms (which may be used either conjunctively or disjunctively) The normal word order in Irish is verb-subject-object (VSO). The forms of the subject pronoun directly following the verb are called conjunctive: The form muid in the 1st person plural is not used in the standard language, but is very common in the dialects. The standard has no subject pronoun in the 1st person pl ...

See also:

Irish morphology, Irish morphology - Pronouns, Irish morphology - Personal pronouns, Irish morphology - Possessive pronouns, Irish morphology - Interrogative pronouns, Irish morphology - Inflected prepositions, Irish morphology - Numbers, Irish morphology - Cardinal numbers, Irish morphology - Ordinal numbers

Read more here: » Irish morphology: Encyclopedia II - Irish morphology - Pronouns

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Transfer of property

The most usual way of acquiring an interest in property is as the result of a consensual transaction with the previous owner, for example, a sale of a gift. Dispositions by will may also be regarded as consensual transactions, since the effect of a will is to provide for the distribution of the deceased person's property to nominated beneficiaries. A person may also obtain an interest in property under a trust established ...

See also:

Property law, Property law - Property rights and contractual rights, Property law - Property rights and personal rights, Property law - Classification, Property law - Possession, Property law - Transfer of property, Property law - Priorities, Property law - Leases, Property law - Footnotes

Read more here: » Property law: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Transfer of property

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Pronunciation

The most common reflexes for old Finnish dental fricatives are /d/ for /ð/, and /ts/ or /tt/ for /θθ/. For example, metsä or mettä < *meθθä and veden < veðen. Loss of 'd' also occurs, e.g. meiän. These are seen as "accent-free" pronunciations. Dialects generally have different reflexes; see Finnish phonology. One important sound change, which has gone to completion in Estonian but occurs complicated in Finnish is the glottalization of word-final 'n'. In some dialects, such as S ...

See also:

Spoken Finnish, Spoken Finnish - Introduction, Spoken Finnish - Pronunciation, Spoken Finnish - Personal pronouns, Spoken Finnish - Numerals, Spoken Finnish - Verbs, Spoken Finnish - Questions, Spoken Finnish - Possessive suffix, Spoken Finnish - Omission of the negative verb, Spoken Finnish - Important regional variations

Read more here: » Spoken Finnish: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Pronunciation

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Property rights and contractual rights

Property rights are rights over things enforceable against other persons. By contrast, contractual rights, are rights enforceable against particular persons. Property rights, however, may arise from a contract, so there is an overlap between the two systems of rights. In relation to the sale of land, for example, two sets of legal relationships exist alongside one another: the personal right to sue for damages ...

See also:

Property law, Property law - Property rights and contractual rights, Property law - Property rights and personal rights, Property law - Classification, Property law - Possession, Property law - Transfer of property, Property law - Priorities, Property law - Leases, Property law - Footnotes

Read more here: » Property law: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Property rights and contractual rights

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Classification

Property law is characterised by a great deal of historical continuity and technical terminology. The basic distinction in common law systems is between real property (land) and personal property (chattels). Before the mid-19th century, the principles governing the devolution of real property and personal property on an intestacy were quite different. Though this dichotomy does not have the same significance anymore, the distinction is still fundamental because of the essential differences between the two categories. An obvious exampl ...

See also:

Property law, Property law - Property rights and contractual rights, Property law - Property rights and personal rights, Property law - Classification, Property law - Possession, Property law - Transfer of property, Property law - Priorities, Property law - Leases, Property law - Footnotes

Read more here: » Property law: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Classification

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Leases

Over the centuries, leases have served many purposes and the nature of legal regulation has varied according to those purposes and the social and economic conditions of the times. Leaseholds, for example, were mainly used for agricultural purposes until the late 18th century and early 19th century when the growth of cities in industrialised countries had made the leasehold an important form of landholding in urban areas. The modern law of landlord and tenant in common law jurisdictions retains the influence of the common law and, part ...

See also:

Property law, Property law - Property rights and contractual rights, Property law - Property rights and personal rights, Property law - Classification, Property law - Possession, Property law - Transfer of property, Property law - Priorities, Property law - Leases, Property law - Footnotes

Read more here: » Property law: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Leases

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Land Registration Act 2002 - Priority

According to s. 29 of the Act, a person aquiring a legal estate for valuable consideration, takes it subject to: a notice on the charges register unregistered overriding interests All other interests are postponed to the interest under the disposition - ie the successful purchaser's interest gets top priority. Land Registration Act 2002 - Restrictions. A restriction on the proprietorship register prevents the registration of a disposition unless comlied with. This ...

See also:

Land Registration Act 2002, Land Registration Act 2002 - History and purpose, Land Registration Act 2002 - Land Registration, Land Registration Act 2002 - Grades of title, Land Registration Act 2002 - Registerable dispositions, Land Registration Act 2002 - Priority, Land Registration Act 2002 - Restrictions, Land Registration Act 2002 - Notices, Land Registration Act 2002 - Adverse possession

Read more here: » Land Registration Act 2002: Encyclopedia II - Land Registration Act 2002 - Priority

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Land Registration Act 2002 - History and purpose

On 13 October 2003 the Land Registration Act 2002 and the Land Registration Rules 2003 came into force, repealing and replacing previous legislation governing land registration (the Land Registration Act 1925, which initialed a different system of land registration). This Act, together with the Rules, regulate the role and practice of HM Land Registry. The Land Registration Act 2002: simplified and modernised the law of land registration makes the register reflect a more accurate picture of a title to land (shows more fully the rights and subsidiary interests which affect it) i ...

See also:

Land Registration Act 2002, Land Registration Act 2002 - History and purpose, Land Registration Act 2002 - Land Registration, Land Registration Act 2002 - Grades of title, Land Registration Act 2002 - Registerable dispositions, Land Registration Act 2002 - Priority, Land Registration Act 2002 - Restrictions, Land Registration Act 2002 - Notices, Land Registration Act 2002 - Adverse possession

Read more here: » Land Registration Act 2002: Encyclopedia II - Land Registration Act 2002 - History and purpose

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Important regional variations

This is a feature of several dialects, such as those of Ostrobothnia and Savonia: breaking up some consonant clusters on syllable boundaries with an epenthetic vowel. The neutral vowel is the same as the preceding vowel. For example, juhla -> juhula "celebration", salmi -> salami "strait", palvelu -> palavelu "service", halpa -> halapa, äffä -> ähävä (via ähvä) "letter F". Pairs of dissimilar consonants with /l/ or /h/ (in Savo, also /n/) as th ...

See also:

Spoken Finnish, Spoken Finnish - Introduction, Spoken Finnish - Pronunciation, Spoken Finnish - Personal pronouns, Spoken Finnish - Numerals, Spoken Finnish - Verbs, Spoken Finnish - Questions, Spoken Finnish - Possessive suffix, Spoken Finnish - Omission of the negative verb, Spoken Finnish - Important regional variations

Read more here: » Spoken Finnish: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Important regional variations

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Property rights and personal rights

Property rights are also distinguished from personal rights. Practically all contemporary societies acknowledge this basic ontological and ethical distinction. In the past, groups lacking political power have often been disqualified from the benefits of property. In an extreme form this has meant that persons have become "objects" of property right, legally "things", or chattels - see slavery. More commonly, marginalised groups have been denied legal rights to own property. These include Jews in Engl ...

See also:

Property law, Property law - Property rights and contractual rights, Property law - Property rights and personal rights, Property law - Classification, Property law - Possession, Property law - Transfer of property, Property law - Priorities, Property law - Leases, Property law - Footnotes

Read more here: » Property law: Encyclopedia II - Property law - Property rights and personal rights

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - List of island nations - Former nations

List of island nations - Historical. Duchy of the Archipelago Kingdom of Cyprus Kingdom of Hawai‘i Kingdom of Man Majapahit Empire Republic of Hawai‘i Republic of Taiwan Sese Islands Dominion of Newfoundland - note 3 Delos Minoans Venice Andros Milos Pholegandros Khios Samos Lesbos Rhodes Zakynthos Merina R ...

See also:

List of island nations, List of island nations - Current, List of island nations - By political status, List of island nations - By geographic configuration, List of island nations - Former nations, List of island nations - Historical, List of island nations - Former colonies possessions protectorates and territories, List of island nations - Micronations, List of island nations - Notes

Read more here: » List of island nations: Encyclopedia II - List of island nations - Former nations

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Questions

In everyday speech, the -ko/kö suffix has the -s clitic added, becoming -kos/kös, which in turn reduces to -ks: olenko minä hengissä? = 'am I alive?' -> oonksmä hengissä? puhutko sinä englantia? = 'do you (sg.) speak English?' -> puhutsä englantii? or puhuksä englantii? tuliko hän jo? = 'did he/she come yet?' -> tulikse jo? (via tuliko se jo?) tekeekö Pekka jotain järkevääkin? = 'does Pekka do something that makes sense, too?' -> t ...

See also:

Spoken Finnish, Spoken Finnish - Introduction, Spoken Finnish - Pronunciation, Spoken Finnish - Personal pronouns, Spoken Finnish - Numerals, Spoken Finnish - Verbs, Spoken Finnish - Questions, Spoken Finnish - Possessive suffix, Spoken Finnish - Omission of the negative verb, Spoken Finnish - Important regional variations

Read more here: » Spoken Finnish: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Questions

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Wake Island - History

Wake Island - Discovery and Exploration. On October 20, 1568, Álvaro de Mendaña de Neyra, a Spanish explorer with two ships, Los Reyes and Todos Santos, discovered "a low barren island, judged to be eight leagues in circumference," to which he gave the name of "San Francisco." The island was eventually named for Captain Samuel Wake, master of the British trading schooner, Prince ...

See also:

Wake Island, Wake Island - Geography, Wake Island - History, Wake Island - Discovery and Exploration, Wake Island - The Wreck of the Libelle, Wake Island - American Possession, Wake Island - Military Buildup, Wake Island - World War II, Wake Island - Postwar, Wake Island - Video Games, Wake Island - Reference

Read more here: » Wake Island: Encyclopedia II - Wake Island - History

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Introduction

As in any language, the spoken version(s) of Finnish vary, sometimes markedly, from the written form. Some of these variations are due to speakers' inexactitude, but some aspects of spoken Finnish have different grammatical properties from written Finnish. The formal language is a constructed language, a fusion of dialects that is no one's mother tongue. Some of its constructs are either too "made up" (e.g. "soft D", cf. Finnish phonology), or too dialectal, e.g. hän (see below), for use in the spoken language. Furthermore, some very common and "accentless" sound chan ...

See also:

Spoken Finnish, Spoken Finnish - Introduction, Spoken Finnish - Pronunciation, Spoken Finnish - Personal pronouns, Spoken Finnish - Numerals, Spoken Finnish - Verbs, Spoken Finnish - Questions, Spoken Finnish - Possessive suffix, Spoken Finnish - Omission of the negative verb, Spoken Finnish - Important regional variations

Read more here: » Spoken Finnish: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Introduction

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Verbs

As noted in the Finnish grammar page, the passive form is normally used in speech for first-person plural. This happens in all tenses, and also for the conditional: 'me olemme olleet lomalla' = 'we have been on holiday' -> 'me on oltu lomalla', 'me ollaan oltu lomalla' In the latter case the 'me' is obligatory, whereas it is not in the 'proper' case since the verb's inflection indicates the person and number. However, 'ollaan oltu lomalla' may be used for example when being asked 'Where have you been?'='Missä te olette olleet?', yet this is very spoken language, ...

See also:

Spoken Finnish, Spoken Finnish - Introduction, Spoken Finnish - Pronunciation, Spoken Finnish - Personal pronouns, Spoken Finnish - Numerals, Spoken Finnish - Verbs, Spoken Finnish - Questions, Spoken Finnish - Possessive suffix, Spoken Finnish - Omission of the negative verb, Spoken Finnish - Important regional variations

Read more here: » Spoken Finnish: Encyclopedia II - Spoken Finnish - Verbs

Possessions: Encyclopedia II - Cook Islands Maori - Grammar

Like for most South Pacific languages, classical descriptions are generaly based on the system used for indo-european languages, especialy concerning grammatical classes (nouns, verbs, adjectives..). Today linguists try to escape from it considering it as a form of glottocentrism, even if any perfect description is an utopia. Most examples are taken from Cook Islands Maori Dictionary, by Jasper Buse with Raututi Taringa edited by Bruce Biggs and Rangi Moeka'a, Auckland, 1995. Cook Islands Maori - Personnal deictics. Si ...

See also:

Cook Islands Maori, Cook Islands Maori - Writing system and pronunciation, Cook Islands Maori - Consonants, Cook Islands Maori - Vowels, Cook Islands Maori - Grammar, Cook Islands Maori - Personnal deictics, Cook Islands Maori - Aspectual marks, Cook Islands Maori - Possessives, Cook Islands Maori - Vocabulary, Cook Islands Maori - Dictionaries and learning method and books

Read more here: » Cook Islands Maori: Encyclopedia II - Cook Islands Maori - Grammar




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