Capacity for a legal right to be sold or otherwise transferred between persons.
Sinónimos
Examples for "alienation"
Examples for "alienation"
1The greatest problem for our children and young people today is alienation.
2It did not work: far from dissolving, his sense of alienation deepened.
3As a result, Ahmed Husseini speaks of a deep alienation from society.
4Or could it be that technology created its own form of alienation?
5How and why the world's diverse political institutions came to be, alienation.
1Besides a pocket-handkerchief he had but one thing alienable.
2Lands, according to this instrument, were free and alienable; the freemen of a corporation held them, but claimed no right of distribution.
3Rights are Natural or Adventitious; Alienable or Inalienable; Perfect or Imperfect.
1She has a popular government, a system of trial by jury, of free suffrage, of vote by ballot, of alienability of property.
1The common fields as an entire tract belonged to the community of Kaskaskia; no individual held any purchased or transferable right in them.
2The rights offering is structured so that shareholders will receive one transferable right for each share of common stock they hold as of Dec. 31.
3By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non- transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen.
4The Fund will issue to its common shareholders of record as of March 24, 2010 one transferable right for each common share held.
1Shareholders of Ceasars Entertainment would get a non-transferrable right to buy shares in Caesars Acquisition Co at $9.43 each.