cadastre

NOUN
  1. a public register showing the details of ownership and value of land; made for the purpose of taxation
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How To Use cadastre In A Sentence

  • It was thought at the time that a full scale legal cadastre was a fundamental requirement, so the program was shelved.
  • Once these are in order the Notary Act (contract to purchase) must be signed in front of a Bulgarian Notary Public and registered in the local cadastre.
  • There will be no sale of companies that are part of the electricity transmission system, nor of those engaged in gas transiting, the transport infrastructure, the territorial cadastre, geodesy, water supply and sewage.
  • Local government officials in charge of the cadastre and valuation systems are well prepared with technical expertise and an awareness of the need to conduct permanent reform within the system.
  • A document replete with cadastres and flow charts that resemble the scratchings of a drunken maze designer.
  • Finally, during my second trip to Mozambique, when I was working principally on land issues, I spent a total of about two weeks working in the archives of the provincial and national offices of the Direcção Nacional de Geografia e Cadastre (DINAGECA), where I found a wealth of documentary material related to land concessions and rural land politics during the colonial and postindependence periods (e.g., cadastral registers and maps, technical reports, surveys, correspondence). Where Women Make History: Gendered Tellings of Community and Change in Magude, Mozambique
  • Most of the local real estate firms support the company's proposal to merge the cadastre and property registers, arguing that this would halve administrative costs and speed up the process by providing a one-stop customer service.
  • When the national cadastre is complete, this municipal responsibility will cease.
  • By means of iconic script - ‘picture writing’ - pictorial manuscripts had ordered religious lore as well as the dynastic genealogies, political histories, and cadastres of cities and kings in pre-Hispanic central Mexico.
  • However, this cannot be ascertained without a legal cadastre in most African rural areas.
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