Sentence examples for all chattels from inspiring English sources

Exact(2)

A surviving wife was thus in a poor position if no gift or legacy had been made to her, though under the statutory matrimonial regime she received half of the community property into which all chattels of both spouses fell.

Although the Napoleonic Code provided for a statutory regime (if no particular marriage contract had been made), under which all chattels and earnings of the spouses would be community property to be shared equally between them or their heirs at the dissolution of the marriage, the husband was vested with all active powers, even over his wife's property.

Similar(58)

5.This is the thing, by some call'd a man, Whose trade is to sell all the chattels he can, From yearlings to adults of life's longest span; In and out of the house that Jeff built.

— With slave pen and auction shackles, driver and cat, together with buyer and seller and breeder and that, most loathsome of bipeds by some call'd a man, whose trade is to sell all the chattels he can, from yearlings to adults of life's longest span, in and out of the house that Jeff built.

7.These buy the slaves, both male and female, and sell their own souls to a boss with a tail, who owns the small soul of that thing call'd a man, whose trade is to sell all the chattels he can, from yearlings to adults of life's longest span, in and out of the house that Jeff built.

6.These are the shackles, for those who suppose their limbs are their own from fingers to toes; And are prone to believe say all that you can, that they shouldn't be sold by that thing call'd a man; Whose trade is to sell all the chattels he can from yearlings to adults of life's longest span, in and out of the house that Jeff built.

10.Here the slave driver in transport applies, nine tails to his victim, nor heeds her shrill cries, Alas! that a driver with nine tails his own, should be slave to a driver who owns only one, albeit he owns that thing call'd a man, whose trade is to sell all the chattels he can, from yearlings to adults of life's longest span, in and out of the house that Jeff built.

8.Here the slave breeder parts with his own flesh to a trader down south, in the heart of secesh, thus trader and breeder secure without fail, the lasting attachment of him with a tail, who owns the small soul of that thing call'd a man, whose trade is to sell all the chattels he can, from yearlings to adult's of life's longest span, in and out of the house that Jeff built.

11.Here's the arch rebel Jeff whose infamous course, has bro't rest to the plow and made active the hearse, and invoked on his head every patriots curse, spread ruin and famine to stock the slave pen, and furnish employment to that thing among men, whose trade is to sell all the chattels he can, from yearlings to adults of life's longest span, in and out of the house that Jeff built.

But now Alison Steadman and I had married, moved to a north London suburb, burdened ourselves with a mortgage, bought a semi-detached house (albeit a pleasant Victorian one), and were busy acquiring all the usual goods and chattels respectable Guardian-reading types acquired.

In the case of a chattels mortgage, the purchaser borrows funds for the purchase of movable property (the chattel).

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