What's the difference between freeholder and peasantry?

Freeholder


Definition:

  • (n.) The possessor of a freehold.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) However, few new commonhold flats are being built, as developers do not have the incentive of profiting from the freehold.
  • (2) It has enabled the Tories to buy back the freehold of the building, which they had sold off to cut their debts, giving them an opportunity to develop the listed property to raise cash.
  • (3) The declaration is not a cure-all, he adds, but can include things such as stipulating that the share of freehold relating to each flat is transferred when each one is sold and that the other joint owners agree to co-operate in transferring the freehold on sale.
  • (4) But Southern Cross is now struggling to meet a huge rent bill because it offloaded freeholds to raise cash during the boom years.
  • (5) The freehold was only shared with the owners of one other flat, so it seemed like a great arrangement.
  • (6) His first step was to bring the residents together so he could bring a leasehold valuation tribunal (LVT) case against the freeholder and property manager.
  • (7) No Freeman shall be taken or imprisoned, or be disseised of his Freehold, or Liberties, or free Customs, or be outlawed, or exiled, or any other wise destroyed; nor will We not pass upon him, nor condemn him, but by lawful judgment of his Peers, or by the Law of the land.
  • (8) There are things you could – and should – do before you buy a share of freehold property.
  • (9) "Where the building contains only a few flats it is not always appropriate to form a company to share the freehold.
  • (10) Because of the problems it has seen relating to share of freehold, the advisory service has issued advice to people buying this type of property to consider a declaration of trust.
  • (11) It also left £65m of cash in the business, later increased to £74m, as well as about £100m of freehold and long leaseholds.
  • (12) Sir Ken always maintained that Morrisons should keep hold of the freeholds on its properties and fought to limit debt – even during the company's buyout of Safeway.
  • (13) Under this arrangement, upkeep of all the common areas will be the responsibility of the shared freeholders, who can either arrange the work themselves or employ a managing agent.
  • (14) If an emirate’s sovereign wealth fund were to pop up with a £20bn offer for the Palace of Westminster’s freehold, promising a leaseback to parliament after a lavish refurbishment that closed it for half-a-dozen years, who can say that this wouldn’t be welcomed by a British government as yet more evidence that “UK plc is open for business”?
  • (15) T'would be amusing if it were to happen while the freeholder of this blog Marcus Christenson, the crown prince of Sweden, was on holiday.
  • (16) When Debenhams was taken over by private equity in the boom years of the noughties, its executives sold off freehold properties, cut costs, and loaded the business with £1bn in debt, before trebling their money by floating it on the Stock Exchange.
  • (17) Channel 4 currently has £200m in reserves as well as a £250m unused borrowing facility, as well as the freehold on its central London headquarters, which could bring in a further £50m.
  • (18) In the case of “foundation” schools – schools whose ownership is in the hands of a trust – switching to academy status entails a direct transfer of freehold from the trust to the new sponsors.
  • (19) The lending criteria of one unnamed major bank, sent to brokers, says the following are excluded: “Studio flats, freehold flats, flats with unacceptable access arrangements (eg rear external staircases), flats converted from former office blocks or flats within blocks where our valuer reports inadequate maintenance of communal areas, ex-local authority or ex-public sector flats that are greater than four storeys high or that have open decking access.” Anecdotally, there is evidence that some lenders are also becoming nervous about expensive one-bedroom flats in London, limiting the maximum mortgage to £500,000.
  • (20) He already holds the cheaply bought freehold of the Croydon building so the shop does not need to be that profitable to give him a healthy return.

Peasantry


Definition:

  • (n.) Peasants, collectively; the body of rustics.
  • (n.) Rusticity; coarseness.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The peasantry had unilaterally ceased paying feudal taxes.
  • (2) It made possible the birth of local bourgeoisies and states dedicated almost exclusively to the extraction of a surplus value from the peasantry through cash cropping.
  • (3) It was no longer a purely anti-fiscal movement, but sought to protect those small enterprises that were threatened by new industries and by large-scale management, and it worked with parallel organisations, such as the Union for the Defence of the Peasantry.
  • (4) The result is that 80% of hungry people live in rural areas and half of them belong to the peasantry.
  • (5) However, little attention was paid to sociocultural factors, which caused the peasantry to reject the medical care system, or to problems of internal efficiency which inhibited utilization.
  • (6) He is the cult-like figurehead of the Knights Templar, which claims to be the righteous defender of the peasantry against a corrupt government.
  • (7) For four decades, the Farc, the army and paramilitaries – claiming respectively to represent the peasantry and proletariat, the state and the landowning classes – fought for terrain and terrorised and drove out those upon it as they advanced or retreated.
  • (8) If the future of cities means a proletariat turning back into a peasantry, we ought not to expect them to be happy about it.
  • (9) The groups that already have been at the lowest level of consumption--the middle classes--have diminished their consumption further and the other groups--the peasantry and the working class--have followed them.
  • (10) New Beginning are about to go on a nationwide recruitment tour and Maguire compares the emerging social movement to the Irish Land League of the 19th century, which successfully gained land for the country's peasantry, or the trade unions of the early 20th century led by socialist stalwarts such as James Connolly and Jim Larkin.
  • (11) "He writes about the peasantry, about life in the countryside, about people struggling to survive, struggling for their dignity, sometimes winning but most of the time losing," said permanent secretary of the Swedish Academy Peter Englund, announcing the win.
  • (12) The direction of the state is unclear, still wishing to be seen as both the champion of the peasantry and of foreign investment .
  • (13) No fiction set in the 14th century, for instance, has ever rivalled the portrayal in Game of Thrones of what, for a hapless peasantry, the ambitions of rival kings were liable to mean in practice: the depredations of écorcheurs ; rape and torture; the long, slow agonies of famine.
  • (14) The English peasantry may have officially died out in the Middle Ages, but a new breed of small-scale farmers who live off a few acres and celebrate life on the land have been accepted to join the world's biggest peasant organisation.
  • (15) The rats followed peasantry and giving the pest, from which depopulation increased.
  • (16) In response, the peasantry rose in nationwide protests.
  • (17) Arafat witnessed anguished family debates about the country's future, and saw something of the "great rebellion", the armed uprising of a desperate and dispossessed peasantry which served as an inspiration for the later, equally unavailing "armed struggle" of his own making.
  • (18) But communist armed forces established bases in the south and turned from the urban poor to the peasantry as the base of their support.
  • (19) The present study constitutes a first approach aiming at analyzing this culture among different Costa Rican social groups such as Indian communities, peasantry, field hands, employees, and marginal urban classes as well.

Words possibly related to "freeholder"

Words possibly related to "peasantry"