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INNKEEPER |
Landlord |
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RENTAL |
Landlord’s income |
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LETTER |
Message to landlord |
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RENT |
Money for landlord |
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OWNER |
Landlord with a title |
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CAPITALLETTER |
Chief Landlord starts with one |
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LANDLORDRY |
The state of a landlord. |
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LEASEE |
First-off fee following less for landlord’s customer |
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HOSTAGES |
Those kidnapped a long time after landlord |
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LESSEE |
Short of a takeover, couples see landlord’s client |
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TOILET |
Parts of Bristol, etc., written on landlord’s sign |
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VILLA |
Country house in Italy used by evil landlord |
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LETIT |
Title destroyed by landlord’s instruction about vacant property |
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BLOODSUCKER |
A hard and exacting master, landlord, or money lender;
an extortioner. |
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KIND-HEARTED |
Having kindness of nature; sympathetic; characterized
by a humane disposition; as, a kind-hearted landlord. |
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AVENAGE |
A quantity of oats paid by a tenant to a landlord in lieu
of rent. |
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KAIN |
Poultry, etc., required by the lease to be paid in kind by a
tenant to his landlord. |
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COIGNY |
The practice of quartering one's self as landlord on a
tenant; a quartering of one's self on anybody. |
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METAYER |
One who cultivates land for a share (usually one half) of
its yield, receiving stock, tools, and seed from the landlord. |
|
HOST |
One who receives or entertains another, whether gratuitously
or for compensation; one from whom another receives food, lodging, or
entertainment; a landlord. |
|
HYPOTHEC |
A landlord's right, independently of stipulation, over
the stocking (cattle, implements, etc.), and crops of his tenant, as
security for payment of rent. |
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LANDLORDISM |
The state of being a landlord; the characteristics of
a landlord; specifically, in Great Britain, the relation of landlords
to tenants, especially as regards leased agricultural lands. |
|
COTTIER |
In Great Britain and Ireland, a person who hires a small
cottage, with or without a plot of land. Cottiers commonly aid in the
work of the landlord's farm. |
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STEELBOW GOODS |
Those goods on a farm, such as corn, cattle,
implements husbandry, etc., which may not be carried off by a removing
tenant, as being the property of the landlord. |
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BOYCOTT |
To combine against (a landlord, tradesman, employer, or
other person), to withhold social or business relations from him, and
to deter others f... |