Occupant

  • 41occupant — oc•cu•pant [[t]ˈɒk yə pənt[/t]] n. 1) a person or group that occupies or has quarters or space in or on something 2) a tenant of a house, estate, office, etc.; resident 3) law an owner through occupancy …

    From formal English to slang

  • 42occupant — /ˈɒkjəpənt / (say okyuhpuhnt) noun 1. someone who occupies. 2. a tenant of a house, estate, office, etc. 3. Law an owner through occupancy. {Latin occupans, present participle} …

  • 43occupant —    In Novell Directory Services (NDS), a user who has been assigned to an Organizational Role object. Each Organizational Role object can have multiple occupants …

    Dictionary of networking

  • 44occupant — an. okupê (Albanais) / in (Villards Thônes), TA, E …

    Dictionnaire Français-Savoyard

  • 45Single-occupant vehicle — A single occupant vehicle (SOV) is a privately operated vehicle whose only occupant is the driver. The drivers of SOVs use their vehicles primarily for personal travel, daily commuting and for running errands. The types of vehicles include, but… …

    Wikipedia

  • 46Owner-Occupant — A resident of a property who also holds the title to that property. In contrast, an absentee owner holds title to the property but does not live there. A landlord is a type of absentee owner. When applying for a mortgage or refinance, the lender… …

    Investment dictionary

  • 47another occupant — index cotenant Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …

    Law dictionary

  • 48common occupant — Where land was granted to a man for the life of another, and the grantee died before the cestui que vie, the land belonged to nobody during the remainder of the life of the cestm que vie, and any man who entered and occupied the land for that… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 49general occupant — A person who took and retained possession of land, as anyone might do, after the death of a tenant for the life of another, and while the person for whose life the estate had been granted still lived. See 2 Bl Comm 258. He was also called common… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 50good faith of occupant making improvement — A reasonable and honest belief of the occupant in his right or title, such state of mind not being negatived by any showing that diligence would have revealed the absence of any title held by him. 27 Am J1st Improv § 14 …

    Ballentine's law dictionary