˜yÐÄvlog

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usufructuary

[ yoo-zoo-fruhk-choo-er-ee, -soo-, yooz-yoo-, yoos- ]

adjective

  1. of, relating to, or of the nature of usufruct.


noun

plural usufructuaries.
  1. a person who has a usufruct property.
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˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins

Origin of usufructuary1

1610–20; < Late Latin Å«²õÅ«´Ú°ùÅ«³¦³Ù³ÜÄå°ù¾±³Ü²õ, equivalent to Å«²õÅ«´Ú°ùÅ«³¦³Ù³Ü ( s ) usufruct + -Äå°ù¾±³Ü²õ -ary
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Example Sentences

Examples have not been reviewed.

Courts have deemed that irrigators have a usufructuary right — a type of property right that allows use of something in the public domain — to the top six feet of water in the lake.

From

The following letter touches incidentally upon the description of the rights of an invader over certain kinds of State property in the occupied territory as being those of a "usufructuary."

From

Through him immense plains are divided, mountains change their positions, forests are grown upon the public squares, one hemisphere produces for another, and every corner of the globe has its usufructuaries.

From

There are no proprietors--merely usufructuaries of the association's capital.

From

According to the Canon Law, the bishop was only the usufructuary of the lands and revenues belonging to his see.

From

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