[
US
/ˈizmənt/
]
[ UK /ˈiːzmənt/ ]
[ UK /ˈiːzmənt/ ]
NOUN
- (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)
-
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