TermGallery
English
English
Spanish
Catalan
Portuguese
Russian
Look up alternatives for...
EN
Interface language
English
Español
Català
Português
Русский
Meanings
Examples
We are using cookies
This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Accept and close
More about cookies
Did you know?
You can double click on a word to look it up on TermGallery.
Meanings of
appurtenant
in English
Furnishing added support.
subsidiary
accessory
adjuvant
auxiliary
adjunct
ancillary
Related terms
supportive
Synonyms
Examples for "
subsidiary
"
subsidiary
accessory
adjuvant
auxiliary
adjunct
Examples for "
subsidiary
"
1
I believe the issue is game preservation in the
subsidiary
Earths, yes?'
2
He suggested they establish a
subsidiary
company in Britain, the paper said.
3
Home Trust also conducts business through its wholly owned
subsidiary
,
Home Bank.
4
ABP's
subsidiary
companies produce value-added and consumer-ready products for major retail multiples.
5
This war was
subsidiary
to the Napoleonic War between Britain and France.
1
Results: Five new epitopes were identified in
accessory
and regulatory HIV-1 proteins.
2
Look to glass, ceramics, wood, resin or paper for additional
accessory
ideas.
3
In its place is the new charge for
accessory
after the fact.
4
Outside the clothing sector it has Zara Home and
accessory
chain Uterque.
5
Baker was not the real principal in the offence, only an
accessory
.
1
Therefore, quercetin is receiving increasing attention as a potential
adjuvant
anticancer treatment.
2
In France, randomised studies in
adjuvant
situation have started with this molecule.
3
For stage II disease the routine use of
adjuvant
treatment remains controversial.
4
Significant
adjuvant
effects were seen at all HA doses on Day 21.
5
Methods: We identified stage I-III pancreatic adenocarcinoma treated surgically with
adjuvant
chemoradiotherapy.
1
However, the jet's
auxiliary
power unit was able to continue supplying power.
2
She starts from the base of the
auxiliary
spiral, near the frame.
3
It may be prejudicial to the great end; it may be
auxiliary
.
4
Caliph heard the engines shift; strange,
auxiliary
sounds reverberating through the zeppelin.
5
The
auxiliary
force will come under the control of the border police.
1
So, you know, we were really an
adjunct
to the democratic party.
2
Automated image analysis should only be used as
adjunct
to pathologist's evaluation.
3
It is not, as in Assyria, a mere
adjunct
of the palace.
4
Microhistology can be a useful
adjunct
in patients with suspected chronic pancreatitis.
5
But Flat racing is an
adjunct
to a multinational, multimillion-pound breeding industry.
1
Effectiveness, however, depended on farmers installing
ancillary
field drains to reduce water-logging.
2
Conclusions: Limited
ancillary
tests are usually required for a diagnosis of gastritis.
3
We have fewer support services and less
ancillary
staff in our schools.
4
The hero sees that the event is
ancillary
;
it must follow him.
5
Our first example of an
ancillary
infection, and a rather dire one.
Usage of
appurtenant
in English
1
It was probably intended as a doorknocker, but its mouth lacked the
appurtenant
ring.
2
They are, at once, a blunt, good-hearted, aboriginal stamp of men, with all the advantages and deficiencies
appurtenant
.
3
On leaving Oundle we pass a station
appurtenant
to Wansford in England, of which we shall say a word presently.
4
Was this right
appurtenant
to the manor, or was it also appendant to a frank tenement in a particular vill?
5
This privilege was entirely withdrawn in October, 1792, the territory
appurtenant
to such privilege having been in the meantime transferred to France.
6
Each conventual bailiff had an important office in the hierarchy of the Order which was permanently
appurtenant
to the headship of that langue.
7
They formed little manufacturing enclaves in the midst of agricultural land, and they were considered to be neither manor nor
appurtenant
to manors.
8
3 So too the rights
appurtenant
to land, whether in town or country, which are usually called servitudes, are incorporeal things.
Grammar, pronunciation and more
Frequent collocations
appurtenant ring
permanently appurtenant
right appurtenant
Appurtenant
through the time