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easement

[ US /ˈizmənt/ ]
[ UK /ˈiːzmənt/ ]
NOUN
  1. (law) the privilege of using something that is not your own (as using another's land as a right of way to your own land)
  2. the act of reducing something unpleasant (as pain or annoyance)
    he asked the nurse for relief from the constant pain

How To Use easement In A Sentence

  • And like past challenges to civilization, such barbarism thrives on Western appeasement and considers enlightened deference as weakness, if not decadence.
  • Will loan term easements and principal reductions become standard campaign issues? Latest Articles
  • But if it does not recognize it until a right is acquired, then the protection of a disseisor in the use of an easement must still be explained by a reference to the facts mentioned in the Lecture referred to. The Common Law
  • All but two of the transactions will be for easements, meaning the city will buy permission to use land beneath the surface. Gazette.com :
  • The difficulties of the site - its geometry, its western orientation, an adjacent future road easement and its flood prone nature - were significant determinants in the ensuing design.
  • Because the law has always been very chary of creating any new negative easements.
  • Today we are faced with a particularly grotesque form of appeasement.
  • This policy of appeasement goes wider than religious minorities. The Sun
  • It is not an incorporeal right, such as, for example, an easement, which appertains to his land and adversely affects the registered Red Land.
  • The owner of the land through which the easement passes is known as the 'servient' owner. Times, Sunday Times
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