Get Free Checker

right of entry

NOUN
  1. the legal right to take possession of real estate in a peaceable manner

How To Use right of entry In A Sentence

  • you write as if this fact whilst inarguably forever condemning me to the ranks of Bohemianism nevertheless earned for me the right of entry into any company
  • The landlord had the right of entry to the flat with due warning.
  • I hope this doesn't mean that this jack-in-office is yet another NGO (non-governmental official) who has some kind of ‘right of entry’ - because he's not coming in here.
  • Many people have a right of entry to our homes - to read meters and suchlike - and people in council houses, particularly, are subject to the erratic arrival of workmen who may or may not be council employees.
  • Mere mention of the place made them regard Orakzai Pathan and hakim with new respect, as having right of entry through the forbidden gate. In The Time Of Light
  • More than forgetting, perhaps what he fears is that he will be denied access—that the little box will one day recognize him behind his thick and convincing beard, will decide he has no right of entry.
  • A descent is thereby cast, which takes away the entry of the disseisee; but the alienatimi beisg made by an infant, is voidable by his entry, and if the descent happens daring his infancy, it does not aifect his right of entry. The First Part of the Institutes of the Laws of England, Or, A Commentary Upon Littleton: Not ...
  • The landlord had the right of entry to the flat with due warning.
  • The landlord had the right of entry to the flat with due warning.
View all