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appendant
[ uh-pen-duhnt ]
adjective
- attached or suspended; annexed.
- associated as an accompaniment or consequence:
the salary appendant to a position.
- Law. pertaining to a legal appendant.
noun
- a person or thing attached or added.
- Law. any subordinate possession or right historically annexed to or dependent on a greater one and automatically passing with it, as by sale or inheritance.
appendant
/ əˈɛԻəԳ /
adjective
- attached, affixed, or added
- attendant or associated as an accompaniment or result
- a less common word for pendent
- law relating to another right
noun
- a person or thing attached or added
- property law a subordinate right or interest, esp in or over land, attached to a greater interest and automatically passing with the sale of the latter
Other yvlog Forms
- ·ԻaԳ ·Իa· ·ԻIJԳ ·ԻIJ· noun
- non·ԻaԳ noun
- ԴDza·ԻaԳ adjective
- non·ԻIJԳ noun
- ԴDza·ԻIJԳ adjective
yvlog History and Origins
Origin of appendant1
Example Sentences
Hanging; annexed; adjunct; concomitant; as, a seal appendant to a paper.
To be a part of, or connected with; to be appendant or related; to owe allegiance or service.
The buckles, &c. were likewise used by his descendants, in their great seals, as is evident from several of them appendant to old deeds.”
And for this reason the laxer right had to conform to the stricter one, and came to be considered as appendant to it.
—Burgh or Borough-English is a custom appendant to ancient boroughs, such as existed in the days of Edward the Confessor and William the Conqueror, and are contained in the Book of Domesday.
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