premises

IPA: prˈɛmʌsʌz

noun

  • Land, and all the built structures on it, especially when considered as a single place.
  • (law) The subject of a conveyance or deed.
  • (slang, archaic, euphemistic) The vagina.
Advertisement

Examples of "premises" in Sentences

  • The premises of this worldview are unsound.
  • This is impermissible by the premises of the system.
  • The premises must be at the disposal of the enterprise.
  • Dan's wish for reviewers to examine premises is one I share.
  • Use covert video or listening devices in premises or vehicles.
  • An opinion founded upon false premises is not equal to one founded on truth, for example.
  • Not that eroge etc. are more creative themselves in premises/design, but that they're just so absent outside of Japan.
  • Surprisingly, the figures showed only 282 people were charged in premises classified as adult entertainment over the same offences.
  • In NSW a premises is considered a brothel even if only one sex worker works there, so this even includes private workers who work by themselves from their own home.
  • In Georgia v. Randolph, the Supreme Court held that the government cannot search the premises based on the consent of one occupant if another occupant of the same premises is present and objects to the search.
  • Well, the extension of the term 'brain' in the premises is the set of human brains, since that's the reference class of the word 'brain' in the context of the mind-brain identity theories that Kripke's argument is addressing.
  • The duty to police premises is actually fairly narrow and the question at issue in Nero (as later reinterpreted) though is basically, once you start policing premises due to a specific event, where does ceasing to do so incur liability?

Related Links

synonyms for premisesdescribing words for premises
Advertisement

Resources

Advertisement
#AaBbCcDdEeFfGgHhIiJjKkLlMmNnOoPpQqRrSsTtUuVvWwXxYyZz

© 2024 Copyright: WordPapa