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The phrase "adjoining estate" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used in legal, real estate, or property-related contexts to refer to a property that is next to or shares a boundary with another property.
Example: "The developer plans to purchase the adjoining estate to expand the current property and create more housing units."
Alternatives: "adjacent property" or "neighboring estate".
Exact(4)
This will be rented, on a subsidised basis, to a local resident who teaches teenagers on the adjoining estate about film making.
However, Wilde claims that the previous owner of Glenmore transferred the hunting rights to his father, David, who sold the adjoining estate for around £6.5m.
One West End council housing area has had £10m spent on tarting up its houses in the past decade, but a fifth of them are still empty, while an adjoining estate has had nothing spent on it, but only 1% of houses are empty.
The IPSS also acquired an adjoining estate, now known as Skinner's Field, from the descendants of James Skinner.
Similar(56)
After the war, the Boy Scout Association bought adjoining land to increase the estate and protect it from rapidly approaching new developments.
The Real Estate Market Faulkner bought the house he called Rowan Oak in 1930 — it was then about 90 years old — for $6,000, later buying adjoining land to have a total of about 32 acres.
A -- Bradford Trebach, a real estate lawyer in the Bronx, said that a paper street, by itself, generally had no impact on the legal marketability of adjoining land.
Lara appears to be musing over the legality of positioning a fielder in the adjoining housing estate.
McCourt announced Oct. 10 that he had agreed to buy the team along with Dodger Stadium, adjoining real estate and training facilities in Vero Beach, Fla., and in the Dominican Republic.
Teeing up business ahead of the 2014 Ryder Cup at Gleneagles, local developers in Perthshire are targeting golf fans who want to play the three courses adjoining Gleneagles Estate.
Krystal, for those who haven't read the novel, is Krystal Weedon, the sixth-former daughter of a junkie, doing her best to bring up her toddler brother – and symbolic of a feckless and semi-criminal underclass living in an adjoining housing estate called the Fields that the more conservative elements of Pagford would like to see separated from their midst by dint of a boundary change.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com