feoffment

听听怎么读
英 ['fefmənt]
美 ['fefmənt]
是什么意思
  • n.

    采邑授与,赠于(或交付)不动产;

  • 英英释义

    Feoffment

    • Feoffment, (or Enfeoffment) in English law was a transfer of land or property that gave the new holder the right to sell it as well as the right to pass it on to his heirs as an inheritance. It was total relinquishment and transfer of all rights of ownership of an estate in land from one individual to another.

    以上来源于:Wikipedia

    学习怎么用

    权威例句

    Ecclesiastical Antecedents to Secular Jurisdiction over the Feoffment to the Uses to Be Declared in Testamentary Instructions
    The Franciscan friars, the feoffment to uses, and canonical theories of property enjoyment before 1535
    The Feoffment of 1546 : An Anglo-Japanese comparison of Title-Deeds
    Concept of Epieikeia in the Chancellor of England's Enforcement of the Feoffment to Uses before 1535, The
    The ecclesiastical contributions to the development and enforcement of the English feoffment to uses, 1066-1535
    FEOFFMENT SEPARITITE
    Real Property. Tortious Feoffment by Life Tenant. Statute of Limitations
    Conflict between the Granting and Habendum Clauses
    Analyses on the Reasons of the Fall of Chu and Rise of Han from the Perspective of Administrative Regionalization