ingress

ingress
in·gress /'in-ˌgres/ n
1: the act of entering
2: the power or liberty of access compare egress

Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law. . 1996.

ingress
I noun access, admission, admittance, approach, entrance, entry, incoming, incursion, ingoing, ingression, ingressus, inlet, inroad, liberty to enter, means of access, means of entry, passage, power of entrance, right of entry, right to enter, way in, way to associated concepts: easement, license, right of access II index access (right of way), admission (entry), admittance (means of approach), avenue (route), entrance, entry (entrance), immigration, incursion, inflow, osmosis, portal

Burton's Legal Thesaurus. . 2006


ingress
n.
Entrance; the act of entering or the right of entrance; opposite of egress.

The Essential Law Dictionary. — Sphinx Publishing, An imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc. . 2008.


ingress
An entrance, or the act of entering. Compare: egress
Category: Real Estate & Rental Property

Nolo’s Plain-English Law Dictionary. . 2009.


ingress
n.
1 The action of entering land or premises.
2 Access to land or premises.

Webster's New World Law Dictionary. . 2000.

ingress
   1) n. entrance.
   2) n. the right to enter.
   3) v. the act of entering. Often used in the combination "ingress and egress," which means entering and leaving, to describe one's rights to come and go under an easement over another's property.
   See also: easement, egress

Law dictionary. . 2013.

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  • Ingress — may refer to:*The act of entering. Antonym of egress. *A type of noise typically encountered when using coaxial cable *Ingress Bell (1834 1913), an English architect *Ingress filtering, a computer network packet filtering technique *Ingress… …   Wikipedia

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  • Ingress — In gress, n. [L. ingressus, fr. ingredi. See {Ingredient}.] [1913 Webster] 1. The act of entering; entrance; as, the ingress of air into the lungs. [1913 Webster] 2. Power or liberty of entrance or access; means of entering; as, all ingress was… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Ingress — In gress, v. i. To go in; to enter. [R.] [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • ingress — (n.) mid 15c., from L. ingressus an advance; walking; an entry, from pp. stem of ingredi to step into, enter (see INGREDIENT (Cf. ingredient)). The verb, sometimes said to be Amer.Eng., is attested from early 14c …   Etymology dictionary

  • ingress — *entrance, entry, entrée, access Antonyms: egress …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • ingress — ► NOUN 1) the action or fact of entering or coming in. 2) a place or means of access. DERIVATIVES ingression noun. ORIGIN Latin ingressus, from ingredi enter …   English terms dictionary

  • ingress — [in gresh′ənin′gres΄] n. [ME < L ingressus, pp. of ingredi, to step into, enter < in , into + gradi, to go: see GRADE] 1. the act of entering: also ingression [in gresh′ən] 2. the right or permission to enter 3. a place or means of… …   English World dictionary

  • Ingress — (Roget s Thesaurus) >Motion into. < N PARAG:Ingress >N GRP: N 1 Sgm: N 1 ingress ingress Sgm: N 1 entrance entrance entry Sgm: N 1 introgression introgression Sgm: N 1 influx influx intrusion inroad inc …   English dictionary for students

  • Ingress — Unter Ingress (engl. Eindringen) versteht man elektromagnetische Störungen, die in Koaxialkabeln durch Sendeanlagen, Haushaltsgeräte, Schaltnetzteile usw. entstehen. Die Störungen treten vor allem dann auf, wenn das Kabel oder dessen Schirmung… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

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