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land |
Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Financial, Acronyms, Idioms, Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.03 sec. |
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land, in law, any ground, soil, or earth regarded as the subject of ownership, including trees, water, buildings added by humans, the air above, and the earth below. Private ownership of land does not exist in groups that live by hunting, fishing, or herding; e.g., in pre-Columbian times in America, the tribe owned the land, and each individual had equal access to it and equal rights to its use. In simple agricultural groups, as in early Europe, the village village, small rural population unit, held together by common economic and political ties. Based on agricultural production, a village is smaller than a town and has been the normal unit of community living in most areas of the world throughout history. ..... Click the link for more information. community made an annual allotment of land to individuals for cultivation. Similar allotments were made under the manorial system manorial system (mənôr`ēəl, măn–) or seignorial system ..... Click the link for more information. . A communal form of rural landholding persisted in Russia into the 20th cent. and still exists in India. The modern sovereign state asserts dominion over all property within its territorial limits, including the land, and by the right of eminent domain (see public ownership public ownership, government ownership of lands, streets, public buildings, utilities, and other business enterprises. The theory that all land and its resources belong ultimately to the people and therefore to the government is very ancient. ..... Click the link for more information. ) can seize privately owned land for public use, with the proviso that the owner be justly compensated. In the former Soviet Union ownership of all land was vested in the nation outright, individuals and organizations being granted provisional rights to its use. Widely distributed private ownership of farmland has been regarded in Western countries as socially—if not always economically—advantageous. The concentration of landholding in a few hands has frequently led to political unrest and social upheaval, as in Latin America, Spain, Italy, the Middle East, and parts of Asia. In economics the term land is used to designate one of the main factors of production; it is another name for nature or natural resources. But few natural resources are free; farmland, for instance, is almost valueless without cultivation. In order to extract crops, minerals, and energy from the land, labor and capital must be applied. In economic theories of value, the share assigned to land as a factor in production is called rent rent, in law, periodic payment by a tenant for the use of another's property. In economics, its meaning is more complex, but since the word rent means any income or yield from an object capable of producing wealth, its limitation to a more special sense is ..... Click the link for more information. . See also public land public land, in U.S. history, land owned by the federal government but not reserved for any special purpose, e.g., for a park or a military reservation. Public land is also called land in the public domain. BibliographySee A. W. Griswold, Farming and Democracy (1948); G. Hallett, The Economics of Agricultural Land Tenure (1960); R. E. Megarry and H. W. R. Wade, The Law of Real Property (3d ed. 1966); A. W. Simpson, A History of the Land Law (2d ed. 1986). landIn economics, the resource that encompasses the natural resources used in production. In classical economics, the three factors of production are land, labour, and capital. Land was considered to be the “original and inexhaustible gift of nature.” In modern economics, it is broadly defined to include all that nature provides, including minerals, forest products, and water and land resources. While many of these are renewable resources, no one considers them “inexhaustible.” The payment to land is called rent. Like land, its definition has been broadened over time to include payment to any productive resource with a relatively fixed supply. landA non-indented area on an optical medium such as a CD-ROM or DVD disc. Contrast with pit. land 1. the solid part of the surface of the earth as distinct from seas, lakes, etc. 2. ground, esp with reference to its use, quality, etc. 3. Law a. any tract of ground capable of being owned as property, together with any buildings on it, extending above and below the surface b. any hereditament, tenement, or other interest; realty 4. a. a country, region, or area b. the people of a country, etc. 5. Economics the factor of production consisting of all natural resources Land Edwin Herbert. 1909--91, US inventor of the Polaroid Land camera land [land] (aerospace engineering) Of an aircraft, to alight on land or a ship deck. (design engineering) The top surface of the tooth of a cutting tool, behind the cutting edge. (electronics) One of the regions between pits on a track on an optical disk. (engineering) In plastics molding equipment, the horizontal bearing surface of a semipositive or flash mold to allow excess material to escape; or the bearing surface along the top of the screw flight in a screw extruder; or the surface of an extrusion die that is parallel to the direction of melt flow. The surface between successive grooves of a diffraction grating or phonograph record. (geography) The portion of the earth's surface that stands above sea level. (metallurgy) In the preparation of a pipe length for welding, the edge of the tube wall that remains perpendicular to the bore after the pipe end has been beveled. (ordnance) One of the raised ridges in the bore of a rifled gun barrel. Land of the Giants a Gulliver’s Travels in outer space. [TV: Terrace, II, 10–11]
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From land to land is the most concise definition of a ship's earthly fate. But after making six books about the adventures of those interesting but queer people who live in the Land of Oz, the Historian learned with sorrow that by an edict of the Supreme Ruler, Ozma of Oz, her country would thereafter be rendered invisible to all who lived outside its borders and that all communication with Oz would, in the future, be cut off. "You will have to go to the Land of Oz to recover it, and your Majesty can't get to the Land of Oz in any possible way," said the Steward, yawning because he had been on duty ninety-six hours, and was sleepy. |
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