usufructuary

adj
/ˌjuːz(j)ʊˈfɹʌkt͡ʃʊˌəɹi/

Etymology

From Late Latin ūsūfructuārius, from ūsūfructus (“a usufruct”) + -ārius (suffix forming a noun denoting an agent of use from another noun); compare French usufructuaire, Italian usufruttuario, Portuguese usufructuario.

  1. derived from ūsūfructuārius

Definitions

  1. Of or pertaining to a usufruct.

    • By this longobard Law the Tenant had only a uſufructuary poſſeſſion of the Fee, the Lord reſerving the propriety or Dominum directum to himself.
    • While water itself is personal property, a water right is a real property interest, a so-called usufructurary right, a right to use water from a specific source for a specific use.
  2. A person who holds property, or the use of assets, by usufruct

    A person who holds property, or the use of assets, by usufruct; a fructuary.

The neighborhood

Vish — recursive loop

No curated loop yet for usufructuary. Loops are being traced one word at a time while the ingestion pipeline matures.

sense glosses and etymology drawn from English Wiktionary · source · CC-BY-SA