erect
erect, vb. 1. To construct. 2. To establish. • In England, erect is one of the formal words of incorporation in a royal charter, being part of the phrase, “We do incorporate, erect, ordain, name, constitute, and establish.” See ERIGIMUS.
erect, vb. 1. To construct. 2. To establish. • In England, erect is one of the formal words of incorporation in a royal charter, being part of the phrase, “We do incorporate, erect, ordain, name, constitute, and establish.” See ERIGIMUS.
erect v. 建立;设立;创立 在英国,它常正式用于准许设立公司的皇家特许状或执照中,所用的语句通常是「we do,incorporate,erect,ordain,name,constitute,and establish…」。其同义词是construct(建造;建立)。
Lords of Erection 〈苏格兰〉直立贵族;站起来的贵族 在苏格兰宗教改革后,国王将原由教会人员担任的圣职转化为世俗的贵族爵位,接受这些爵位的人被称为站起来的贵族。
A type of bridge loan used primarily for erecting a building. • The loan is typically advanced in parts as work progresses and is used to pay the contractor, subcontractors, and material suppliers. See interim financing under FINANCING.
Secured transactions. A structure, transportable in one or more sections, that when traveling is 8 body feet or more in width or 40 body feet or more in length, or, when erected on site, is 320 or more square feet, and that is built on a permanent chassis and designed to be used as a
in liberam baroniam (in lib-[schwa]r-[schwa]m b[schwa]-roh-nee-[schwa]m). [Law Latin] Hist. Into a free barony. “In former times, many persons holding certain feudal rights from the Crown were called barons, but in the strict legal sense, the title was only due to him whose lands had been erected or confirmed by the king in liberam baroniam. The
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vidame (vee-dam). [French] Hist. In French feudal law, an officer who represented the bishop. • Over time, these officers erected their offices into fiefs and became feudal nobles, such as the vidame of Chartres, Rheims, etc. They continued to take their titles from the seat of the bishop whom they represented, even though the lands
wall. An erection of stone, brick, or other material raised to varying heights, esp. inside or surrounding a building, for privacy, security, or enclosure. ancient wall. A party wall that has stood for at least 20 years, thus giving each party an easement right to refuse to allow the other party to remove or substantially