Knowledge (XXG)

Appurtenance

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62:
has defined appurtenance as "That which belongs to something else. Something annexed to another thing more worthy." Applying this definition, an empty portion of land behind an adjoining house that is regarded as that house's backyard may be an appurtenance to the house. The idea being expressed is
70:
theory, appurtenance (or "belongingness") is the relation between two things seen which exert influence on each other. For example, fields of color exert influence on each other. "A field part x is determined in its appearance by its 'appurtenance' to other field parts. The more x belongs to the
82:, an appurtenance is a modifier that is appended or prepended to another word to coin a new word that expresses "belongingness". In the English language, appurtenances are most commonly found in 34:
is something subordinate to or belonging to another larger, principal entity, that is, an adjunct, satellite, or accessory that generally accompanies something else. The word derives from
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context, an appurtenance refers to a right, privilege, or improvement belonging to or that accompanies a principal property. For example, the
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be determined by the gradient xy, and the less it belongs to the part z, the less will its whiteness depend on the gradient xz."
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that the backyard "belongs" to the house, which is the more significant of the two properties.
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Something accompanying or subordinate to another larger entity
90:, for example, 'Israeli', 'Bengali' etc. have an 131: 129: 8: 157:"Cohen v. Whitcomb, 142 Minn. 20 (1919)" 125: 193:, Oxford University Press, p. 63 7: 25: 71:field part y, the more will its 167:from the original on 2021-10-01 146:. Retrieved February 23, 2018. 1: 228: 60:Supreme Court of Minnesota 189:Gilchrist, Alan (2006), 94:suffix of appurtenance. 212:Latin legal terminology 191:Seeing Black and White 104:Fixture (property law) 187:(1935) p. 246 qtd in 16:(Redirected from 219: 196: 194: 182: 176: 175: 173: 172: 153: 147: 133: 21: 227: 226: 222: 221: 220: 218: 217: 216: 202: 201: 200: 199: 188: 183: 179: 170: 168: 155: 154: 150: 134: 127: 122: 100: 52: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 225: 223: 215: 214: 204: 203: 198: 197: 177: 148: 140:Dictionary.com 136:"Appurtenance" 124: 123: 121: 118: 117: 116: 111: 109:Tenement (law) 106: 99: 96: 51: 48: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 224: 213: 210: 209: 207: 192: 186: 181: 178: 166: 162: 161:cite.case.law 158: 152: 149: 145: 141: 137: 132: 130: 126: 119: 115: 112: 110: 107: 105: 102: 101: 97: 95: 93: 89: 85: 81: 76: 74: 69: 64: 61: 57: 49: 47: 45: 41: 37: 33: 19: 190: 180: 169:. Retrieved 160: 151: 144:Random House 91: 77: 72: 65: 53: 39: 32:appurtenance 31: 29: 114:Contenement 40:appertinere 18:Appurtenant 171:2021-10-01 120:References 80:lexicology 42: 'to 73:whiteness 44:appertain 206:Category 165:Archived 98:See also 88:demonyms 84:toponyms 68:Gestalt 185:Koffka 56:legal 54:In a 50:Usage 38: 36:Latin 86:and 78:In 66:In 46:'. 30:An 208:: 163:. 159:. 142:. 138:. 128:^ 92:-i 195:. 174:. 20:)

Index

Appurtenant
Latin
appertain
legal
Supreme Court of Minnesota
Gestalt
lexicology
toponyms
demonyms
Fixture (property law)
Tenement (law)
Contenement


"Appurtenance"
Dictionary.com
Random House
"Cohen v. Whitcomb, 142 Minn. 20 (1919)"
Archived
Koffka
Category
Latin legal terminology

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