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HOME | Definition of tenure (TENURE, Tenure)


    Tenure \Ten"ure\, n. [F. tenure, OF. teneure, fr. F. tenir to
    hold. See Tenable.]
    1. The act or right of holding, as property, especially real
    estate.
    [1913 Webster]

    That the tenure of estates might rest on equity, the
    Indian title to lands was in all cases to be
    quieted. --Bancroft.
    [1913 Webster]

    2. (Eng. Law) The manner of holding lands and tenements of a
    superior.
    [1913 Webster]

    Note: Tenure is inseparable from the idea of property in
    land, according to the theory of the English law; and
    this idea of tenure pervades, to a considerable extent,
    the law of real property in the United States, where
    the title to land is essentially allodial, and almost
    all lands are held in fee simple, not of a superior,
    but the whole right and title to the property being
    vested in the owner. Tenure, in general, then, is the
    particular manner of holding real estate, as by
    exclusive title or ownership, by fee simple, by fee
    tail, by courtesy, in dower, by copyhold, by lease, at
    will, etc.
    [1913 Webster]

    3. The consideration, condition, or service which the
    occupier of land gives to his lord or superior for the use
    of his land.
    [1913 Webster]

    4. Manner of holding, in general; as, in absolute
    governments, men hold their rights by a precarious tenure.
    [1913 Webster]

    All that seems thine own,
    Held by the tenure of his will alone. --Cowper.
    [1913 Webster]

    Tenure by fee alms. (Law) See Frankalmoigne.
    [1913 Webster]

    The Collaborative International Dictionary of English v.0.48


    tenure
    n 1: the term during which some position is held [syn: term of
    office
    , incumbency]
    2: the right to hold property; part of an ancient hierarchical
    system of holding lands [syn: land tenure]
    v : give life-time employment to; "She was tenured after she
    published her book"

    WordNet (r) 2.0


    103 Moby Thesaurus words for "tenure":
    adverse possession, alodium, appointment, berth, billet, burgage,
    claim, clamp, clasp, clench, clinch, clutch, colony,
    continuous tenure, de facto, de jure, dependency, derivative title,
    duration, employment, engagement, enlistment, fee fief,
    fee position, fee simple, fee simple absolute,
    fee simple conditional, fee simple defeasible,
    fee simple determinable, fee tail, feodum, feud, fiefdom,
    frankalmoign, free socage, freehold, gavelkind, gig, grapple,
    grasp, grip, gripe, having title to, hitch, hold, holding,
    incumbency, job, knight service, lay fee, lease, leasehold,
    legal claim, legal possession, mandate, moonlighting, occupancy,
    occupation, office, opening, original title, owning, permanence,
    permanency, place, position, possessing, possession, post,
    preoccupancy, preoccupation, prepossession, prescription,
    prison term, property, property rights, proprietary rights,
    residence, residency, second job, seisin, service, situation,
    socage, spell, squatting, station, stretch, sublease, tenancy,
    tenantry, tenure in chivalry, term, time, title, tour, underlease,
    undertenancy, usucapion, vacancy, villein socage, villeinhold,
    villenage

    Moby Thesaurus II by Grady Ward, 1.0


    TENURE, estates. The manner in which lands or tenements are holden.
    2. According to the English law, all lands are held mediately or
    immediately from the king, as lord paramount and supreme proprietor of all
    the lands in the kingdom. Co. Litt. 1 b, 65 a; 2 Bl. Com. 105.
    3. The idea of tenure; pervades, to a considerable degree, the law of
    real property in the several states; the title to land is essentially
    allodial, and every tenant in fee simple has an absolute and perfect title,
    yet in technical language, his estate is called an estate in fee simple, and
    the tenure free and common socage. 3 Kent, Com. 289, 290. In the states
    formed out of the North Western Territory, it seems that the doctrine of
    tenures is not in force, and that real estate is owned by an absolute and
    allodial title. This is owing to the wise provisions on this subject
    contained in the celebrated ordinance of 1787. Am. Jur. No. 21, p. 94, 5. In
    New York, 1 Rev. St. 718; Pennsylvania, 5 Rawle, R. 112; Connecticut, 1 Rev.
    L. 348 and Michigan, Mich. L. 393, feudal tenures have been abolished, and
    lands are held by allodial titles. South Carolina has adopted the statute,
    12 C. II., c. 24, which established in England the tenure of free and common
    socage. 1 Brev. Dig. 136. Vide Wright on Tenures; Bro. h.t.; Treatises of
    Feuds and Tenures by Knight's service; 20 Vin Ab. 201; Com. Dig. h.t.; Bac.
    Ab. h. Thom. Co. Litt. Index, h.t.; Sulliv. Lect. Index, h.t.

    Bouvier's Law Dictionary, Revised 6th Ed (1856)


incumbency, land tenure, term of office


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