hereditament in Vietnamese

Danh từ
1. tài sản có thể thừa hưởng, tài sản có thể kế thừa
2. di sản, tài sản kế thừa

Sentence patterns related to "hereditament"

Below are sample sentences containing the word "hereditament" from the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "hereditament", or refer to the context using the word "hereditament" in the English - Vietnamese Medical Dictionary.

1. For the purposes of subsection, "land"does not include incorporeal hereditament.

2. An Advowson, regarded by the law as property, is termed an incorporeal hereditament, “a right issuing out of a thing corporate.” It is a marketable property, which may be granted by deed or will, which passes by a grant of all lands and tenements, and which may, therefore, become the subject of litigation.

3. ‘Hence existence Appertains to the nature of substance, and every substance contains within itself the complete explanation of its own nature and existence.’ ‘Thus the Act provides, as it seems to me, firstly that every hereditament has to have its own rateable value and secondly that every rateable value Appertains to a particular

4. An Advowson, regarded by the law as property, is termed an incorporeal hereditament, "a right issuing out of a thing corporate." It is a marketable property, which may be granted by deed or will, which passes by a grant of all lands and tenements, and which may, therefore, become the subject of litigation.

5. An Advowson, regarded by the law as property, is termed an incorporeal hereditament, "a right issuing out of a thing corporate." It is a marketable property, which may be granted by deed or will, which passes by a grant of all lands and tenements, and which may, therefore, become the subject of litigation.

6. An Advowson, regarded by the law as property, is termed an incorporeal hereditament, "a right issuing out of a thing corporate." It is a marketable property, which may be granted by deed or will, which passes by a grant of all lands and tenements, and which may, therefore, become the subject of litigation.