¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Moveables
1. moveable [n] - See also: moveable
Lexicographical Neighbors of Moveables
Literary usage of Moveables
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. An Institute of the Law of Scotland: In Four Books : in the Order of Sir by John Erskine, George Mackenzie, James Ivory (1828)
"1 When heirship-moveables were first introduced, oxen were used only for draught,
1 and a single ox therefore would have been of little service. ..."
2. A Treatise on the Law of Evidence in Scotland by William Gillespie Dickson, John Skelton (1864)
"I. Proof of property in moveables. § 554. It has already been seen that the
possession of ... Contracts and obligations which relate to corporeal moveables, ..."
3. A Treatise on the Law of Mortgage by William Wyllys Mackeson, Henry Arthur Smith, Richard Holmes Coote (1884)
"In a more restricted sense it means moveables, or fixtures, that is, chattels
affixed to the soil: it is used in this chapter iu the sense of moveables. ..."
4. Principles of Equity by Henry Home Kames (1825)
"moveables, Domestic and Foreign, and their legal Effects. LOCAL situation is
essential to a ... I take first under consideration moveables accessory to an ..."
5. The Law of Domicil as a Branch of the Law of England: Stated in the Form of by Albert Venn Dicey (1879)
"... an assignment of all the' bankrupt's moveables, wherever situated, to the
affects representative of his creditors (6). wherever A _ _ moveables ..."
6. A History of Taxation and Taxes in England: From the Earliest Times to the by Stephen Dowell (1884)
"THE TAXATION OF moveables. The Saladin tithe, 1188. ... A tax on moveables, levied
in several countries in Europe, towards the expenses of the first crusade ..."
7. Manual of the Law of Scotland by John Hill Burton (1847)
"SUCCESSION TO moveables. SECT. 1.—Order of Succession. If one of the next of kin
is heir to the heritage, he is excluded from any share in the moveable ..."
8. Mr. Serjeant Stephen's New Commentaries on the Laws of England: (partly by Henry John Stephen, Edward Jenks (1903)
"moveables consist, in the first place, of inanimate things, such as goods, plate,
money, and the like ; or vegetable productions, such as the fruit or other ..."
9. An Institute of the Law of Scotland: In Four Books : in the Order of Sir by John Erskine, George Mackenzie, James Ivory (1828)
"1 When heirship-moveables were first introduced, oxen were used only for draught,
1 and a single ox therefore would have been of little service. ..."
10. A Treatise on the Law of Evidence in Scotland by William Gillespie Dickson, John Skelton (1864)
"I. Proof of property in moveables. § 554. It has already been seen that the
possession of ... Contracts and obligations which relate to corporeal moveables, ..."
11. A Treatise on the Law of Mortgage by William Wyllys Mackeson, Henry Arthur Smith, Richard Holmes Coote (1884)
"In a more restricted sense it means moveables, or fixtures, that is, chattels
affixed to the soil: it is used in this chapter iu the sense of moveables. ..."
12. Principles of Equity by Henry Home Kames (1825)
"moveables, Domestic and Foreign, and their legal Effects. LOCAL situation is
essential to a ... I take first under consideration moveables accessory to an ..."
13. The Law of Domicil as a Branch of the Law of England: Stated in the Form of by Albert Venn Dicey (1879)
"... an assignment of all the' bankrupt's moveables, wherever situated, to the
affects representative of his creditors (6). wherever A _ _ moveables ..."
14. A History of Taxation and Taxes in England: From the Earliest Times to the by Stephen Dowell (1884)
"THE TAXATION OF moveables. The Saladin tithe, 1188. ... A tax on moveables, levied
in several countries in Europe, towards the expenses of the first crusade ..."
15. Manual of the Law of Scotland by John Hill Burton (1847)
"SUCCESSION TO moveables. SECT. 1.—Order of Succession. If one of the next of kin
is heir to the heritage, he is excluded from any share in the moveable ..."
16. Mr. Serjeant Stephen's New Commentaries on the Laws of England: (partly by Henry John Stephen, Edward Jenks (1903)
"moveables consist, in the first place, of inanimate things, such as goods, plate,
money, and the like ; or vegetable productions, such as the fruit or other ..."